ppl. a. [f. prec. + -ED1.] Marked with a stigma (lit. and fig.); branded; marked with infamy, severely censured.

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1621.  Burton, Anat. Mel., I. ii. III. vi. 135. Let them be proued, perjured, stigmatized, convict roagues, theeues, traitors.

2

1657.  Billingsly, Brachy-Martyrol., xi. 36. To multiply their fame, And not as markes of stigmatized shame.

3

1828.  P. Cunningham, N. S. Wales, II. 124. Doomed to be, like the seed of Cain, a stigmatised race.

4

1850.  T. M‘Crie, Mem. Sir A. Agnew, ii. 35. In these days sympathy with the slave was a rare and stigmatized thing.

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  b.  Marked with the stigmata: see STIGMA 3.

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1841.  Earl Shrewsbury, Lett. to A. L. Phillipps, 44. An account of the spiritual condition of stigmatized persons.

7

1872.  D. H. Tuke, Illustr. Infl. Mind upon Body, 83. The flux of the Stigmata upon Fridays has been verified also in the case of the Sister Emmerich (1824) and the Stigmatised of the Tyrol.

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  c.  Path. Impressed as a stigma: see STIGMA 4.

9

1822–9.  Good’s Study Med., III. 27. The stigmatised and pathognomonic dots.

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