weaponed

English

Etymology

From weapon + -ed.

Adjective

weaponed (not comparable)

  1. Armed with a weapon.
  2. (figuratively) Equipped, prepared.
    • 1644, J[ohn] M[ilton], “The Preface”, in The Doctrine or Discipline of Divorce: [], 2nd edition, London: [s.n.], OCLC 868004604, book I, page 2:
      [Y]et now, if any two be but once handed in the church and have tasted in any sort of the nuptial bed, let them find themselves never so mistaken in their dispositions through any error, concealment or misadventure, that through their different tempers, thoughts and constitutions they can neither be to one another a remedy against loneliness nor live in any union or contentment all their days, yet they shall, so they be but found suitably weaponed to the least possibility of sensual enjoyment, be made, spite of antipathy, to fadge together, and combine as they may to their unspeakable wearisomeness and despair of all sociable delight in the ordinance which God established to that very end.
    • 1910, M. C. Klingelsmith, “The Continuity of Case Law,” in University of Pennsylvania Law Review and American Law Register, April 1910, No. 7, p. 404,
      Which will win? The man with only a superficial knowledge, going half way back, or the man with a knowledge that is thoroughly grounded in the sources of the law? But it will be said that the chances are that neither will ever have gone so far back, and thus one will be as well-weaponed as the other.
    • 1992, X. J. Kennedy, “Terse Elegy for J. V. Cunningham,” first published in Dark Horses: New Poems; reprinted in In a Prominent Bar in Secaucus: New and Selected Poems, 1955-2007, Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2007, p. 113,
      Though with a slash a Pomp’s gut he could slit,
      On his own work he worked his weaponed wit
      And penned with patient skill and lore immense
      Prodigious mind, keen ear, rare common sense,
      Only those words he could crush down no more
      Like matter pressured to a dwarf star’s core.

Derived terms

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