ppl. a. [f. UNIFY v. + -ED1.] That is or has been made into one from separate parts; united, combined, consolidated.
1862. F. Hall, Hindu Philos. Syst., 178. The residual part he is to consider as unified.
1882. Standard, 30 Dec., 2/2. The Unified Debt fell about 18l.
1883. Fortn. Rev., July, 107. After the whole metropolis is under a unified authority.
b. Used absolutely or as sb.
1883. Pall Mall G., 30 Nov., 5/2. Egyptian Unifieds continued to rise yesterday.
1884. Academy, 2 Aug., 74/1. Unification is pleasant to the unifier only, not to the unified.