dated
from
The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
Date \Date\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Dated}; p. pr. & vb. n.
{Dating}.] [Cf. F. dater. See 2d {Date}.]
1. To note the time of writing or executing; to express in an
instrument the time of its execution; as, to date a
letter, a bond, a deed, or a charter.
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2. To note or fix the time of, as of an event; to give the
date of; as, to date the building of the pyramids.
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Note: We may say dated at or from a place.
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The letter is dated at Philadephia. --G. T.
Curtis.
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You will be suprised, I don't question, to find
among your correspondencies in foreign parts, a
letter dated from Blois. --Addison.
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In the countries of his jornal seems to have been
written; parts of it are dated from them. --M.
Arnold.
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from
Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0
91 Moby Thesaurus words for "dated":
ago, ahead of time, anachronistic, annalistic, antedated,
antiquated, antique, archaic, back-number, beforehand,
behind the times, behind time, behindhand, belated, blown over, by,
bygone, bypast, calendarial, calendric, chronogrammatic,
chronographic, chronologic, chronoscopic, dead, dead and buried,
deceased, defunct, demode, departed, diaristic, disused, early,
elapsed, expired, extinct, finished, foredated, forgotten, gone,
gone glimmering, gone out, gone-by, has-been, horologic,
intercalary, intercalated, irrecoverable, lapsed, late,
metachronistic, metronomic, misdated, mistimed, no more, obsolete,
old, old hat, old-fashioned, old-timey, oldfangled, out,
out of date, out of fashion, out of season, out of style,
out of use, out-of-date, outdated, outmoded, outworn, over,
overdue, parachronistic, passe, passed, passed away, past,
past due, postdated, prochronistic, run out, styleless, tardy,
temporal, timekeeping, unfashionable, unpunctual, unseasonable,
vanished, wound up
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