ppl. a. [f. JUDGE v. + -ED1.] Tried or sentenced in court, decided, awarded, estimated, etc.: see the verb.

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  Rare exc. in the compounds ILL-JUDGED, WELL-JUDGED.

2

1537.  Starkey, Lett. to Pole, in Strype, Eccl. Mem. (1721), I. II. App. lxxx. 190. If case be that you reach to the judged truth, you need not to fear.

3

1595.  Daniel, Civ. Wares (1609), V. ci. As he to his iudged exile went.

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1710.  Prideaux, Orig. Tithes, ii. 42. Precedents and judged cases have ever had the like authority.

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  absol.  1667.  Milton, P. L., X. 81. Where none Are to behold the Judgement, but the judg’d.

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