ppl. a. [f. STAGNATE v. + -ED1.] Rendered stagnant.

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1703.  R. Neve, City & C. Purchaser, 58. A stagnated Pool.

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1733.  W. Ellis, Chiltern & Vale Farm., 235. They can emit a stagnated pestiferous Vapour.

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1746.  W. Thompson, R. N. Adv. (1757), 41. So hanging them up to be ready for salting, with the stagnated … Blood for the Salt to purge out.

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1748.  Anson’s Voy., II. v. 183. Tainted or stagnated air … is often produced by the continuance of great heats.

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1805.  Loudon, Improv. Hot-Houses, 74. Heat passes … through wool or stagnated air more slowly than through any other body.

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1846.  J. Baxter, Libr. Pract. Agric. (ed. 4), II. 75. This method sets the stagnated bed in a fermentation, which makes the moisture run out of it.

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1873.  Ralfe, Phys. Chem., 103. Owing to the escape of the free carbonic acid … from the stagnated fluids of the part, the calcium salt is precipitated.

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