a. and ppl. a. Forms: see STOMACH sb. [f. STOMACH sb. and v. + -ED.]

1

  1.  Having a stomach. In quots. only as the second element of parasynthetic formations, having a stomach of the specified kind or condition.

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1540.  Hyrde, trans. Vives’ Instr. Chr. Wom. (1592), R 2. Likewise as of men, he who is most like stomacked unto a woman, nor lusty couraged, wil remember injurie longest.

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1567.  Maplet, Gr. Forest, 83 b. There are some so eger and stout stomaked that they haue [etc.].

4

1589.  Greene, Menaphon (Arb.), 86. And with that Carmela was so full stomackt that she wept.

5

1615.  S. Ward, Coal fr. Altar, 79. This want of reformation makes the queasie stomacked Brownists cast them selues out of our Church.

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1710.  T. Fuller, Pharm. Extemp., a 3. When Patients are so weak Stomach’d … that they cannot … admit of the Bark.

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1843.  G. P. R. James, Forest Days (1847), 66. A jolly, large-stomached personage.

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  † 2.  In senses of STOMACH v.: Offended; incited, encouraged. Obs.

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1599.  James I., Βασιλικον Δωρον, To Rdr. (1603), A 4 b. I will the more narrowly rippe up the wordes, whereat they seeme to bee somewhat stomacked.

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1623.  Cockeram, I. Stomaked, angered, hartened.

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c. 1712.  G. Guthrie, in Monogr. (1900), 10. Alexander suggested to his father that if he would allow him he could make money by his skill in musick, which the stomached father resented with no less than a pistoll.

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