Obs. [f. L. conjūrāt- ppl. stem of conjūrāre to swear together, band themselves together by oath: see CONJURE.] trans. a. To band together by oath. b. To conspire.

1

  Hence Conjurated ppl. a.

2

1545.  Sir W. Paget, in Froude, Hist. Eng., IV. xxii. 107, note. That being a thing before contrived and conjurated between them.

3

1825.  Blackw. Mag., XVII. 730. The audience, who are his conjurated partizans, are in the secret.

4