v. [UN-1 4, 3.] trans. To rob, or empty, of a treasure. Also const. of.

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1600.  Shaks., A. Y. L., II. ii. 7. In the morning early, They found the bed vntreasur’d of their Mistris.

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1819.  Moore, Mem. (1853), III. 64. Niches untreasured of their busts, and rooms depopulated of their statues.

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1853.  J. Mitford, Corr. T. Gray & W. Mason, 33, note. His [Lord John Cavendish’s] fair little person, and the quaintness with which he untreasured, as by rote, the stores of his memory, occasioned George Selwyn to call him ‘the learned canarybird.’

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