ppl. a. Also æther-. [f. prec. + -ED1.] Made or rendered ethereal; exalted, refined, spiritualized.

1

a. 1850.  Jane Porter, in Spurgeon, Treas. Dav., Ps. xcii. 4. Half-mortal, half-etherealized.

2

1851.  Ruskin, Mod. Paint., II. III. I. xiii. § 15. Age of expanded and ætherialized moral expression.

3

1863.  Mrs. C. Clarke, Shaks. Char., iv. 104. Ariel was the etherealised impersonation of swift obedience.

4

1872.  Liddon, Elem. Relig., ii. 42. The religion of the future—an etherialized abstraction.

5

1874.  M. Arnold, in Contemp. Rev., Oct., 811. Angels, etherialized men.

6