ppl. a. [f. prec. + -ED.]
† 1. Oppressed or hurt in spirit; distressed, troubled, annoyed, vexed (with, at). Obs. replaced by grieved.
c. 1350. Will. Palerne, 266. Goþ til him swiþe · lest he agreved wex.
c. 1385. Chaucer, Leg. G. Wom., 345. A God ne sholde nat be thus agreved, But of hys deitee he shal be stable.
1477. Earl Rivers (Caxton), Dictes, 77. He was gretely agreued with suche as helde the same opynyon.
1513. Douglas, Æneis, II. xi. 111. Grete Goddis semand with Troy aggreuit.
1557. Surrey, Æneid, II. (R.), 820. And great gods eke aggreued with our town.
1577. trans. Bullingers Decades (1592), 561. Agreeued at, or ashamed of the thing that they haue done.
2. Injured or wronged in ones rights, relations or position; injuriously affected by the action of any one; having cause of grief or offence, having a grievance (at, by).
1590. Marlowe, 1st Pt. Tamburl., I. i. 1. Brother Cosroe, I find myself agrieved.
1643. Milton, Divorce (1851), ii. 25. The agrieved person shall doe more manly, to be extraordinary and singular in clayming the due right whereof he is frustrated.
1790. Cowper, Iliad, I. 757. My mother, be advised, and though aggrieved Yet patient.
1859. T. Lewin, Invas. Brit., 61. The Britons were as much the aggrieved as the aggressive party.
1870. Bowen, Logic, ix. 293. The Catholics had a right to feel aggrieved that these laws should be permitted to remain in the statute book.
† 3. Injured physically; hurt, afflicted. Obs.
1725. Bradley, Fam. Dict., s.v. Sprain, Rub and chafe it upon the aggrieved place.
1783. P. Pott, Chirurg., Wks. II. 278. What disorders the aggrieved part is naturally liable to.
† 4. Aggravated, exaggerated. Obs.
1513. More, Richd. III., Wks. 1557, 62/1. Smal matters agreuid with heinouse names.
1559. Myrroure for Mag., Gloc., xxi. 1. Aggreued was also this latter offence, With former matter.