ppl. a. [f. COLLAR sb. and v. + -ED.]
1. Wearing a collar (round the neck).
c. 1386. Chaucer, Knt.s T., 1294. White Alauntz with mosel faste ybounde, Colered [so 3 MSS.; v.r. coleres] of gold with tourettes fyled rounde.
c. 1440. Promp. Parv., 87. Colleryde, torquatus.
1714. Orig. Canto Spencer, xx. 7. The baser Whelps Perversely drew their collard Necks awry.
1850. Mrs. Browning, Poems, II. 217. The collared knights.
1862. R. Patterson, Ess. Hist. & Art, 367. Playing with a frisky red-collared kitten.
b. in Her. So Collared-chained.
1681. T. Jordan, Lond. Joy, in Heath, Grocers Comp. (1869), 542. Three Greyhounds Currant, Armd and Collard, Gules.
1809. Naval Chron., XXI. 189. An unicorns head collared gules.
1882. Cussans, Heraldry, vi. 90. Collared, having a collar about the neck. When an Ape is thus described, the collar is affixed around its loins.
2. Furnished or fitted with a collar.
1650. Fuller, Pisgah, IV. vi. 101. As the Iews coates were collared above; so they were skirted and fringed below.
1747. Hooson, Miners Dict., T iij b. They are mostly Collered at both Ends, and are a good way to support a Shaft.
1823. New Monthly Mag., VIII. 495. He wore a blue coat, bedecked with silver coins, cuffed and collared with rich crimson velvet.
1887. Baring-Gould, Gaverocks, xii. Is Mr. Penhalligan to go limp-collared?
3. Zool. Having a marking round the neck.
1812. Smellie, trans. Buffons Nat. Hist., XV. 124. Where the Collared Black Flycatcher is found.
1828. Stark, Elem. Nat. Hist., I. 61. Collared Lemur . A ruff of red hair.
1865. Sat. Rev., 5 Aug., 182. The collared turtle-dove, an Indian species, was found at Jericho in mid-winter.
b. Said of cells, etc.; cf. COLLAR sb. 17 d.
1888. Rolleston & Jackson, Anim. Life, Index, Collared cells [of sponges]. Ibid., 790. The epithelia are unilaminar, the endoderm cells typically collared and flagellate.
4. Cookery. Rolled up and tied with a string, as a piece of meat from which the bones have been removed, a fish, brawn, etc.
1681. Chetham, Anglers Vade-m., xxxix. (1689), 266. If youll have the collard eel to keep a Month.
1744. Mrs. Delany, Autobiog. & Corr. (1861), II. 332. Second course: Partridge, Sweetbreads, Collared pig, Creamed apple tart.
1774. Westm. Mag., II. 47. This turban for my head is collard brawn.
1806. Forsyth, Beauties Scotl., III. 491. Collared eels, eels cured and rolled up into a shape resembling a collar.
1844. J. T. Hewlett, Parsons & W., iii. A collared eel, which would have provoked the appetite of an anchorite.
b. Collared pork, pigs face, head, etc.: the meat of the head and other parts of a pig, ox, etc., boiled, cut into small pieces and pressed into the shape of a roll, often with the skin laid round.
1861. Mrs. Beeton, Househ. Managem., 393. Collared pigs face (a breakfast or luncheon dish).
1873. E. Smith, Foods, 81. Collared pork is made from the gelatinous parts of the pig, as the ears, feet, and face.