¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Buffed
1. buff [v] - See also: buff
Lexicographical Neighbors of Buffed
Literary usage of Buffed
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The London Medical Gazette (1841)
"Blood last taken highly cupped and buffed ; pulse maintaining its frequency ;
slept for some time. 22nd.—Collapse came on during the night, and she died at ..."
2. The Lancet (1842)
"Blood drawn yesterday buffed and cupped, the buffy coot being very thick. ...
Blood drawn yesterday in two vessels, buffed and cupped in both. ..."
3. A Treatise on human physiology: Designed for the Use of Students and by John Call Dalton (1864)
"BLOOD, .bowing the ciot from the sides of the vessel, they curl over buffed and
cupped. toward each other, so that the upper surface Bowl Of ..."
4. Prairie Farms and Prairie Folk by Parker Gillmore (1872)
"CHAPTER I. Speculation in Coal Oil—"Sold" by a Secessionist—buffed Grouse—Prairie
Chickens and American Partridge—Dangerous Sport—Pairing of Huffed ..."
5. The Works of William Hewson, F. R. S. by William Hewson, George Gulliver (1846)
"Thus, in a man aged 33, affected with pulmonary catarrh, the blood thickly buffed,
the specific gravity of the serum was 1024; in a man aged 25, ..."