Obs. [f. Span- (as in SPANIARD, etc.) + -(I)FY.] trans. To make Spanish; to Spaniolize. Hence † Spanified ppl. a.

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1599.  in Archpriest Controv. (Camden), I. 214. The ruine of or poore country wche we greately feared by that Spanified league.

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1600.  W. Watson, Decacordon (1602), 350. Those honors they meane of, are throughly spanified. Ibid. (1601), Import. Consid. (1831), 15. Utterly refusing to applaud to Parsons’ Spanified Title.

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1602.  in Archpriest Controv. (Camden), II. 184. Some greate persons ar Spanified.

4