ppl. a. [f. prec. + -ED1.] Marked with a stigma (lit. and fig.); branded; marked with infamy, severely censured.
1621. Burton, Anat. Mel., I. ii. III. vi. 135. Let them be proued, perjured, stigmatized, convict roagues, theeues, traitors.
1657. Billingsly, Brachy-Martyrol., xi. 36. To multiply their fame, And not as markes of stigmatized shame.
1828. P. Cunningham, N. S. Wales, II. 124. Doomed to be, like the seed of Cain, a stigmatised race.
1850. T. MCrie, Mem. Sir A. Agnew, ii. 35. In these days sympathy with the slave was a rare and stigmatized thing.
b. Marked with the stigmata: see STIGMA 3.
1841. Earl Shrewsbury, Lett. to A. L. Phillipps, 44. An account of the spiritual condition of stigmatized persons.
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.
c. Path. Impressed as a stigma: see STIGMA 4.
18229. Goods Study Med., III. 27. The stigmatised and pathognomonic dots.