▪ I. † ˈtransmutate, ppl. a. Obs.
[ad. L. transmūtāt-us, pa. pple. of transmūtāre to transmute.]
Transmuted. (Const. as pa. pple.)
| 1432–50 tr. Higden (Rolls) II. 343 Iupiter..putte her in a schippe in whom he had a bulle depicte, wherefore poetes feyne Iupiter to be transmutate in to the similitude of a bulle. 1668 Baxter Dying Th. (1850) 156 As if the fiery part of the candle were annihilated or transmutate,..when the candle goeth out; and were not fire, and in action still. |
▪ II. † ˈtransmutate, v. Obs. rare.
[f. ppl. stem of L. transmūtāre to transmute: see -ate3.]
trans. = transmute 1.
| 1632 Vicars æneid v. 140 Here fortune her faire face first transmutated. 1659 Stanley Hist. Philos. ix. (1687) 550/2 Solid Bodies, whose Elements are four, Fire, Water, Air, Earth; of all which, transmutated, and totally changed, the World consists. 1659 Ibid. xi. 763/1 By immixture of some small thing to be transmutated. |