rare. [f. prec. sb.] trans. To transmit by tradition; to relate as a tradition.

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1640.  Fuller, Joseph’s 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.

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1872.  Daily News, 12 Aug., 6/2 It is traditioned of Mr. Childers that he has been seen in a pea jacket.

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  So Traditioned a. (rare1), having traditions of a kind specified by the prefixed word.

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1850.  R. Simpson, Mem. Worth, iv. 47. The Crawick, a wild traditioned stream pours its waters into the Nith.

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