Found 4 items, similar to formed.
English → Indonesian (Kamus Landak)
Definition: form
bentuk
English → Indonesian (quick)
Definition: formed
terbentuk
English → English (WordNet)
Definition: formed
formed
adj 1: clearly defined;
“I have no formed opinion about the chances
of success” [syn:
defined,
settled]
2: having or given a form or shape [ant:
unformed]
3: formed in the mind [syn:
conceived]
4: having taken on a definite arrangement;
“cheerleaders were
formed into letters”;
“we saw troops formed into columns”
5: fully developed as by discipline or training;
“a fully
formed literary style”
English → English (gcide)
Definition: Formed
Formed
\Formed\, a.
1. (Astron.) Arranged, as stars in a constellation; as,
formed stars. [R.]
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2. (Biol.) Having structure; capable of growth and
development; organized; as, the formed or organized
ferments. See
Ferment, n.
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Formed material (Biol.), a term employed by Beale to denote
the lifeless matter of a cell, that which is
physiologically dead, in distinction from the truly
germinal or living matter.
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Form
\Form\ (f[^o]rm), v. t. [imp. & p. p.
Formed (f[^o]rmd);
p. pr. & vb. n.
Forming.] [F. former, L. formare, fr.
forma. See
Form, n.]
1. To give form or shape to; to frame; to construct; to make;
to fashion.
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God formed man of the dust of the ground. --Gen. ii.
7.
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The thought that labors in my forming brain. --Rowe.
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2. To give a particular shape to; to shape, mold, or fashion
into a certain state or condition; to arrange; to adjust;
also, to model by instruction and discipline; to mold by
influence, etc.; to train.
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'T is education forms the common mind. --Pope.
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Thus formed for speed, he challenges the wind.
--Dryden.
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3. To go to make up; to act as constituent of; to be the
essential or constitutive elements of; to answer for; to
make the shape of; -- said of that out of which anything
is formed or constituted, in whole or in part.
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The diplomatic politicians . . . who formed by far
the majority. --Burke.
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4. To provide with a form, as a hare. See
Form, n., 9.
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The melancholy hare is formed in brakes and briers.
--Drayton.
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5. (Gram.) To derive by grammatical rules, as by adding the
proper suffixes and affixes.
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6. (Elec.) To treat (plates) so as to bring them to fit
condition for introduction into a storage battery, causing
one plate to be composed more or less of spongy lead, and
the other of lead peroxide. This was formerly done by
repeated slow alternations of the charging current, but
now the plates or grids are coated or filled, one with a
paste of red lead and the other with litharge, introduced
into the cell, and formed by a direct charging current.
[Webster 1913 Suppl.]