leisured

English

Etymology

From leisure + -ed.

Adjective

leisured (comparative more leisured, superlative most leisured)

  1. Having leisure time, especially as a result of not having to work for a living.
    The leisured class may produce great advances in the arts, or it may fritter away its time.
  2. Leisurely, filled with leisure.
    • 1893, John Davidson, “St Valentine’s Eve” in Fleet Street Eclogues, London: Elkin Mathews & John Lane, p. 20,
      And brooding thus on my ephemeral flowers
      That smoulder in the wilderness, I thought,
      By envy sore distraught,
      Of amaranths that burn in lordly bowers,
      Of men divinely blessed with leisured hours,
    • 1904 July 9 and 16, Gilbert K[eith] Chesterton, “The Eccentric Seclusion of the Old Lady”, in The Club of Queer Trades, New York, N.Y.; London: Harper & Brothers Publishers, published April 1905, OCLC 10768944, page 249:
      "All right," said Basil, rising also and seating himself in a leisured way in an armchair. "Don't hurry for us," he said, glancing round at the litter of the room, "we have all the illustrated papers."
    • 1938, Norman Lindsay, Age of Consent, Sydney: Ure Smith, published 1962, OCLC 751607287, page 139:
      Bradly tapped the ashes from his pipe, signifying a leisured interlude over. "Time to get a move on," he said, and began to unlace his boots for wading.
    • 1972, “Leviathans,” Time, 3 January, 1972,
      Everything that Brinnin writes about is defunct. The big liners were killed, of course, by the jet plane, a device that condensed the leisured misery of a five-day crossing into seven hours of concentrated nullity or wretchedness.
    • 2016, Brennavan Sritharan, “Ordinary Beauty: Revisiting Saul Leiter’s pioneering images,” British Journal of Photography, 26 January, 2016,
      While his career spanned a time when quintessential New York street photography was defined as swift, sharp and precise, Leiter’s leisured, impressionist style went against the grain.

Translations

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