Obs. [f. Span- (as in SPANIARD, etc.) + -(I)FY.] trans. To make Spanish; to Spaniolize. Hence † Spanified ppl. a.
1599. in Archpriest Controv. (Camden), I. 214. The ruine of or poore country wche we greately feared by that Spanified league.
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.
1602. in Archpriest Controv. (Camden), II. 184. Some greate persons ar Spanified.