2. Adjective. Equipped with arrows ¹
3. Adjective. Pointed-to by an arrow (in a diagram) ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Arrowed
1. arrow [v] - See also: arrow
Lexicographical Neighbors of Arrowed
Literary usage of Arrowed
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Songs of Yosemite by Harold Symmes (1911)
"... A trembling halo, flash of arrowed gold,— And day hath dawned in one refulgent
flow. A glow that doth a dreaming heart incite, A flush of virgin wonder, ..."
2. Timehri: The Journal of the Royal Agricultural and Commercial Society of by Royal Agricultural and Commercial Society of British Guiana (1895)
"Of 2 samples of canes (Perseverance), marked arrowed, arrows dead in sheath, ...
The arrowed canes yielded juice of fair quality, and which was very ..."
3. Steel Ships: Their Construction and Maintenance : a Manual for Shipbuilders by Thomas Walton (1908)
"35 is divided by the arrowed lines into twelve strips, each 1 in. in depth. Fio.
35.—The arrowed lines in the upper half of the bar represent the resistance ..."
4. The Journal of Comparative Pathology and Therapeutics (1888)
"Small vessel at centre with histiocytic cells (arrowed) showing early nuclear
clearings and ... Two also have granular cytoplasmic inclusions (arrowed). ..."
5. The Jamaica Planter's Guide, Or, A System for Planting and Managing a Sugar by Thomas Roughley (1823)
"For if any indifferent, sour, blemished, or arrowed tops, are put into the ground
in the fall ... The arrowed top is a pithy, almost hollow, sapless trunk, ..."
6. A Late Triassic Footprint Fauna from the Culpeper Basin, Northern Virginia by Robert E. Weems (1987)
"The top arrowed line shows the average directions of travel of the ... The lower
arrowed lines show the same results if these are considered to ..."
7. A New English Grammar, Logical and Historical: By Henry Sweet by Henry Sweet (1900)
"849. a underwent the same changes as a, being gradually arrowed till it passed from
... In Third MnE (cc) was further arrowed into close (ee), ..."