enemied

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English

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Verb

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enemied

  1. simple past and past participle of enemy

Adjective

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enemied (comparative more enemied, superlative most enemied)

  1. Characterized by enmity.
    • 1979, Valerie Polakow Suransky, Paulo Freire in Ann Arbor - Volumes 1-2, page 62:
      Processes of mystification deny the existence of oppression in this setting, and as a result, antagonistic and often enemied relations between professors and students are understood minimally.
    • 1996, William Bronk, The cage of age, page 64:
      That's us in other but as part of it however special we think to be, however enemied and set apart we make of other, the way life fades to death and is in all is how we are.
    • 2006, Georg Johannes Kugler, Kunsthistorisches Museum Vienna:
      Through this service he was able to sketch a portrait of Kardinal Albergati, who, as legate to the pope, travelled to the enemied courts of England, France and Burgundy to mediate peace during the "One-hundred-Year War".