[f. med.L. ūrīnāt-, ppl. stem of ūrīnāre to pass water, f. L. ūrīna URINE sb.1]

1

  1.  intr. To discharge urine; to make water; to micturate.

2

1599.  A. M., trans. Gabelhouer’s Bk. Physicke, 1170/2. When the Patient vrinateth in the bath.

3

1831.  J. Davies, Mat. Med., 208. Diuretics (διουρεω, I urinate), act upon the general system in the same manner as stimulants.

4

1845.  Lancet, 25 Jan., 83/2. The patient now urinates very freely.

5

1879.  Duncan, Clin. Lect. Dis. Wom., x. 110. A hysterical woman, when she is under the influence of that condition, urinates frequently.

6

  2.  trans. a. To wet or saturate with urine.

7

1768.  [see URINATED ppl. a.].

8

1885.  H. O. Forbes, Nat. Wand. E. Archip., 116. The adjags first urinate all the grass.

9

  b.  To pass as or after the manner of urine.

10

1915.  Evid. before Bryce’s Committee German Outrages, 142. During this journey one man in the second wagon went mad, two in the same wagon tried to commit suicide and about 20 of the men there, urinated blood.

11

  Hence Urinated ppl. a.

12

1768.  [W. Donaldson], Life Sir B. Sapskull, II. ix. 74. I was swaddled in my urinated blankets.

13