kneaden
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈnɛdən/, /ˈniːdən/
Verb
kneaden
- (archaic) past participle of knead
- 1551, Wylliam Turner [i.e., William Turner], “Of Sea Holly”, in A New Herball, […], London: […] Steven Mierdman, and they are to be soolde […] by John Gybken, →OCLC, folio 87, recto:
- if it be kneden with wyne and layde to, it healeth the bytinges of vipers, dogges and menne.
- 1677, J[ohn] Cheyney, Quakeriſm Proved to be Groſs Blaſphemy and Antichriſtian Hereſie, London: Richard Butler, page 16:
- How one? not as a drop of water uniting with the Ocean, becomes ſubſtantially one with it, nor as divers corns ground and kneaden, and baked, becomes one loaf […]
- 1863, Jean Ingelow, “A Cottage in a Chine”, in Poems, London: Longman, Green, Longman, Roberts & Green, page 174:
- This bird, with its carol clear, / When the red clay was kneaden, / And God made Adam our father dear, / Sang to him thus in Eden.
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