ppl. a. [f. CONJURE v. + -ED.]

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  † 1.  Sworn as a member of a traitorous association or conspiracy. Obs.

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a. 1547.  Surrey, Æneid, II. (R.). They bind themselves with the conjured bands.

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a. 1572.  Knox, Hist. Ref., Wks. 1846, I. 15. Bischope James Beatoun … ane conjured ennemye to Christ Jesus.

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1644.  Prynne, Rome’s Master-p. (ed. 2), 21. Yet they are Jesuites, and conjured members of the Society.

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1688.  R. L’Estrange, Brief Hist. Times, II. 72. Instruments of the conjur’d Society.

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  † 2.  Influenced or affected by conjuring or the use of magic; exorcised. Obs.

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1599.  Harsnet, Agst. Darell, 18. Their fustie reliques, their conjured holy water.

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1634.  Canne, Necess. Separ. (1849), 115. The conjured font, (as they name it,) was brought in by Pius the First, in the year 147.

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