a. and ppl. a. Chiefly poet. [f. QUIVER sb.1 or v.1 + -ED.]

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  1.  Provided or equipped with a quiver.

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1634.  Milton, Comus, 422. Like a quiver’d Nymph with Arrows keen.

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a. 1661.  Holyday, Juvenal, 22. Quiver’d Semiramis th’ Assyrian ne’re Did Thus.

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1717.  Addison, trans. Ovid’s. Met., Wks. 1758, I. 169. Diana, with a sprightly train Of quiver’d virgins.

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1813.  Scott, Rokeby, I. xxi. A giant he, With quivered back.

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1874.  W. Bruce, Hebrew Odes, 24. Safe from the shout of the quivered foe.

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  2.  Placed or kept in, or as in, a quiver.

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1651.  Sherburne, Rape of Hellen, Poems 55. When his quiver’d Shafts she did not see, She knew he was not Love.

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1725.  Pope, Odyss., XXII. 4. Full in their face the lifted bow he bore, And quiver’d deaths.

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1846.  Keble, Lyra Innoc. (1873), 175. If she once unlock her quivered store.

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