mark.' name='description'> mark'd - definition and meaning

Definitions

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • verb archaic Simple past tense and past participle of mark.

Etymologies

Sorry, no etymologies found.

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Examples

  • I have read your Work Sir with much real pleasure, and thank you for the mark'd approbation which you are pleased to bestow on my Rural scetches of Life as it goes.

    Letter 87 2009

  • I herewith return you Moores Book [4] with thanks for the pleasure it has given me, I have marked with pencil those pieces which I have copy'd as my favourites, and those mark'd double are particular favorites, so you may condemn or applaud my taste, as in your judgement seemeth meet — if you have the other volume (for this I see is the second) will you let it me?

    Letter 339 2009

  • I understand the Castle-looking rocks on the crown of the little Doward [3] to be the real Arthurs Hall, which in the map is mark'd nearly so, but for fear of being wrong I hisitated in saying 'This crown of rude rock, Arthur's Hall.'

    Letter 265 2009

  • Last night as passing through Exeter Change I stopd at a Book stall and observed the Farmer's Boy laying there for sale, and the new Book too; mark'd with very large writing, 'Bloomfield's Rural Tales,' a young man took it up, and I observed he read the whole of the preface through, and perhaps little thought that the author stood at his elbow.

    Letter 78 2009

  • Thou art only mark'd for hot vengeance and the rod of heaven.

    Archive 2009-01-01 2009

  • Thou art only mark'd for hot vengeance and the rod of heaven.

    [shakespearean insults] time for some more 2009

  • One that Heaven has now mark'd with its just Vengeance, and has sent this Sickness as a Scourge to his

    The Amours of Bosvil and Galesia 2008

  • Catalogue of Worthies; but he always follows the wild Mazes mark'd out by

    Exilius 2008

  • Maid! what wild Meanders of strange and hard Adventures has Fortune mark'd out for thy Virtue to trace; what strange Vicissitudes hast thou encounter'd in the short Space of thy Life; yet short as it is, it had been happy for thee if it had pleas'd the Gods to have abridg'd it, and taken me out of the World ere I had beheld this lovely Object of my pleasing Pain.

    Exilius 2008

  • One that Heaven has now mark'd with its just Vengeance, and has sent this Sickness as a Scourge to his

    The Amours of Bosvil and Galesia 2008

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