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Definition of Equipped
1. Adjective. Provided or fitted out with what is necessary or useful or appropriate. "A ship equipped with every mechanical aid to navigation"
Similar to: Accoutered, Accoutred, Armored, Panoplied, Helmeted, Outfitted, Prepared, Transistorised, Transistorized, Visored
Antonyms: Unequipped
2. Adjective. Provided with whatever is necessary for a purpose (as furniture or equipment or authority). "A completely furnished toolbox"
Category relationships: Article Of Furniture, Furniture, Piece Of Furniture
Similar to: Appointed, Fitted Out, Outfitted, Stocked, Stocked With, Volumed, Well-appointed, Well-found
Antonyms: Unfurnished
3. Adjective. Prepared with proper equipment. "Equipped for service in the Arctic"
4. Adjective. Carrying weapons.
Definition of Equipped
1. Verb. (past of equip) ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Equipped
1. equip [v] - See also: equip
Lexicographical Neighbors of Equipped
Literary usage of Equipped
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Who's who in America by Albert Nelson Marquis (1899)
"The Largest and Best equipped Homoeopathic Medical College in the World. ...
Actual Laboratory Instruction in thoroughly equipped Laboratories. ..."
2. The Encyclopædia Britannica: A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, Literature and by Hugh Chisholm (1911)
"10) on somewhat improved lines, 36 ft. in length, and equipped with Fie. ii. ...
Л number of surf-boats have also been equipped with gasoline engines of ..."
3. The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography by James Terry White, James T. White & Company (1898)
"... with which he remained connected until 1879, when he organized a slock company
and built and equipped mill A, of the Nashville Cotton Mills, ..."
4. Thucydides Translated Into English by Benjamin Jowett, Thucydides (1881)
"Now the Getae and their neighbours border on the Scythians, and are equipped like
them, for they are all horse-archers. He also summoned to his standard ..."
5. United States Supreme Court Reports by Lawyers Co-operative Publishing Company, United States Supreme Court (1904)
"That, however, is a question of intention, and as there was special reason for
requiring locomotives to be equipped with power driving- wheel brakes, ..."