a. [f. UNIFORM sb. 2 + -ED.] Dressed in or wearing uniform. (Freq. c. 1880–.)

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1813.  Lady Lyttelton, Corr., 12 Dec. Wednesday we dine at Count Romanzoff’s—full-dressed, long-trained, uniformed.

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1840.  Gen. P. Thompson, Exerc. (1842), V. 53. A uniformed agent of the law.

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1895.  Meredith, Amazing Marriage, xliii. A foreign army or tag-rag of uniformed rascals.

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  fig. and transf.  1864.  Lowell, Fireside Trav., 154. We … come out uniformed … with habits of thinking and doing cut on one pattern.

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1892.  Nation (N.Y.), 3 March, 176/1. The book is handsomely uniformed in Confederate gray.

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