rare. [f. prec. sb.] trans. To transmit by tradition; to relate as a tradition.
1640. Fuller, Josephs Coat, 1 Cor. xi. 23 (1867), 43. Παρέδωκα ὑμῖν . English it as you please, I traditioned it unto you. Ibid. (1655), Ch. Hist. VI. iii. 318. The following story is traditioned with very much credit amongst our English Catholicks. Ibid. (a. 1661), Worthies, Somerset. (1662), III. 20. This I may call a Charitable Curiosity, if true what is traditioned.
1872. Daily News, 12 Aug., 6/2 It is traditioned of Mr. Childers that he has been seen in a pea jacket.
So Traditioned a. (rare1), having traditions of a kind specified by the prefixed word.
1850. R. Simpson, Mem. Worth, iv. 47. The Crawick, a wild traditioned stream pours its waters into the Nith.