[f. prec.] trans. To afford convenience or accommodation to; to suit; to accommodate.

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1630.  Hales, Gold. Rem. (1688), 365. What way we may be pleasur’d and convenienc’d.

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1677.  Yarranton, Eng. Improv., Ep. to Rdr. According as they … do convenience themselves with just and equal Laws and Customs. Ibid., 43. In places that are eminently convenienced for quick getting out.

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1885.  Pall Mall G., 28 July, 4/2. A general rule that the public are not to be convenienced unless they pay for it.

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