ppl. a. [f. prec. vb. + -ED1.] Made a thrall, enslaved, held in bondage; also transf. thrall-like, servile.

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1527.  St. Papers Hen. VIII., I. 230. For the delyveraunce of Your Grace out of the thraulde, pensif, and dolerous lif that the same is in.

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a. 1586.  Sidney, Arcadia, II. (1622), 103. With the most submissiue behauiour that a thralled heart could expresse.

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1665.  Surv. Aff. Netherl., 179. The English spirit, that prefers an honourable death to a thralled life.

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1859.  A. Macmillan, Lett. (1908), 11. Italy is the thralled place she is, owing to her indulgence in that luscious enfeebling vein of literature.

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