v. rare. [f. TRANS- + L. femina: cf. EFFEMINATE v.] trans. See quot. 1656. Hence Transfeminated ppl. a.

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1646.  Sir T. Browne, Pseud. Ep., III. xvii. 148. These transfeminated persons were really men at first, although succeeding years produced the manifesto or evidence of their virilities.

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1656.  Blount, Glossogr., Transfeminate..., to turn from woman to man, or from one sex to another.

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1898.  G. Meredith, Odes Fr. Hist., 39. With a breath he blew them out, to beat their wings The way of such transfeminated things.

4