ppl. a. [f. CALM v. + -ED.] Made calm, reduced to calmness.

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1590.  Greene, Arcad. (1616), 3. The Dolphines … fetcht their carreers on the calmed waues.

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1795.  Southey, Joan of Arc, VIII. 669. The calm’d ocean.

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1877.  Mrs. Oliphant, Makers Flor., iii. 86. The poet’s life in Ravenna has altogether a softened, calmed religious twilight about it.

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  † b.  Detained by a calm, becalmed. Obs.

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1634.  in Ld. Campbell, Chancellors (1857), III. lxiii. 251. For a more speedy passage of calmed ships.

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