ppl. a. Obs. [f. prec. + -ED.]

1

  1.  Weakened, enfeebled, diseased in body, affected with illness, indisposed; impaired.

2

1521.  State Pap. Hen. VIII., VI. 83. The same day I spake with the King, my Lady was sumwhat accrased.

3

1540.  Whitinton, Tullyes Off., I. 37. The maner of phisycions is to be folowed, whiche with easy medicynes cure them that be a lytell acrased.

4

1565.  Jewel, Repl. to Harding (1611), 183. Then is M. Hardings argument much acrased, and concludeth not so much, as is pretended.

5

a. 1670.  Hacket, Life of Williams, II. 100. No good physician will try experiments upon an accrazed body.

6

  2.  Mentally affected; crazed.

7

1576.  Gascoigne, in Nichols’s Prog. Q. Eliz., I. 496. A Porter? surely then He eyther was accrased, Or else, to see so many men His spirits were amased.

8

1634.  Sir J. Harington, Ariosto’s Orl. Fur., XLVI. xxi. 396. Don Leon with these newes was so accrazed, He seemed in a traunce.

9