ppl. a. Also æther-. [f. prec. + -ED1.] Made or rendered ethereal; exalted, refined, spiritualized.
a. 1850. Jane Porter, in Spurgeon, Treas. Dav., Ps. xcii. 4. Half-mortal, half-etherealized.
1851. Ruskin, Mod. Paint., II. III. I. xiii. § 15. Age of expanded and ætherialized moral expression.
1863. Mrs. C. Clarke, Shaks. Char., iv. 104. Ariel was the etherealised impersonation of swift obedience.
1872. Liddon, Elem. Relig., ii. 42. The religion of the futurean etherialized abstraction.
1874. M. Arnold, in Contemp. Rev., Oct., 811. Angels, etherialized men.