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Definition of Bearded
1. Adjective. Having hair on the cheeks and chin.
Similar to: Unshaved, Unshaven
Derivative terms: Whisker
2. Adjective. Having a growth of hairlike awns. "Bearded wheatgrass"
Definition of Bearded
1. a. Having a beard.
Definition of Bearded
1. Verb. (past of beard) ¹
2. Adjective. having a beard ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Bearded
1. beard [v] - See also: beard
Medical Definition of Bearded
1.
Having a beard. "Bearded fellow." . "Bearded grain." . Bearded vulture, Bearded eagle.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Bearded
Literary usage of Bearded
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Gray's New Manual of Botany: A Handbook of the Flowering Plants and Ferns of by Asa ( Gray, Merritt Lyndon Fernald, Benjamin Lincoln Robinson (1908)
"¡•heaths not bearded at the summit . ... bearded at the summit. Pale» about ae
long as the lemma : rallus-halra one ..."
2. A history of British birds by Francis Orpen Morris (1851)
"bearded PINNOCK. REED PHEASANT. Y BARFOG, OF THE ANCIENT BRITISH. ... The bearded
Titmouse is a native of Europe, being abundant in Holland, ..."
3. Transactions by Norfolk and Norwich Naturalists' Society, Norwick Eng, Thomas Southwell, Norfolk and Norwich Naturalists' Society (1894)
"It is strange that previous to this date the Pollack was unrecorded as a Norfolk
fish. Large ones are rarely taken by the cod-liners. THREE-bearded ROCKLING ..."
4. Science by American Association for the Advancement of Science (1917)
"It will be noted from Table I. that the bearded varieties have produced more
tillers per plant in every case. In Table II. is given the summary of the ..."
5. Athenian Lekythoi: With Outline Drawing in Glaze Varnish on a White Ground by Arthur Fairbanks (1907)
"Facing him stands in profile a bearded man in similar mantle, his right hand
grasping a spear. The high helmet (cheek pieces raised) on his head breaks the ..."
6. Flora of the Rocky Mountains and Adjacent Plains, Colorado, Utah, Wyoming by Per Axel Rydberg (1917)
"... slightly bearded within; sterile stamen bearded three-fourths its length. ...
bearded in the throat; sterile stamen densely yellow-bearded. ..."
7. The Natural History of the Human Species: Its Typical Forms, Primaeval by Charles Hamilton Smith (1852)
"Albinism is frequent; and both the phenomena of an entire horny skin and of total
hirsute- ness seem to belong exclusively to the bearded type. ..."