▪ I. admixt, ppl. a.
(ædˈmɪkst)
[ad. L. admixt-us pa. pple. of admiscē-re to mix with, f. ad to + miscē-re to mingle; afterwards taken as the pa. pple. of an assumed Eng. vb. admix, and spelled admix-ed.]
Mingled with; added as an ingredient.
| c 1420 Pallad. On Husb. i. ix, Withouten moolde admixt, nor sandy lene. 1651 Cartwright Roy. Slave (Nares) Like those better spirits, that have nothing of earth admixt. 1671 J. Webster Metallogr. xiii. 214 Having something of purple coloured raw silver admixed. 1803 in Phil. Trans. XCIII. 14 Dry..merely implies free from mechanically admixed water. |
▪ II. † adˈmixt, v. Obs. rare—1.
[f. prec.]
= admix.
| 1570 Dee Math. Pref. 5 Not supposing, nor admixtyng any thyng created..to..represent those Numbers imagined. |