ppl. a. [f. ENTER v. + -ED1.] In various senses of the verb, e.g.: That has gone or advanced within; that a person, etc., has gone into; that has been placed on a register.

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1534.  Ld. Berners, Gold. Bk. M. Aurel. (1546), M iij. A lorde of noble bloude, and somewhat entred in age.

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1796.  Coleridge, Ode Departing Year, i. Ere yet the entered cloud foreclosed my sight.

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1887.  Pall Mall Gaz., 4 Aug., 2/1. The entered vassal … supposed by a legal fiction still to be the holder of the estate.

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