Artificial intelligent assistant

barken

I. barken, v. Sc.
    (ˈbɑːk(ə)n)
    [f. bark n.1 + -en2.]
    1. trans. To dry up (any sticky daubing) into a hardened crust or bark; to cover or stiffen by this process.

15131827 [see barkened]. 1852 Blackw. Mag. LXXI. 739 Even at breakfast your trout are spoiled. They are barkened with oatmeal. 1861 Reade Cloister & H. xxiv. (D.) A shrewd frost that barkened the blood on my wounds.

    2. intr. To dry and become a hardened crust.

1826 Blackw. Mag. XIX. 400 He will barken into bedimmed and shrivelled scaliness. 1829 Scott Guy M. xxiii, Let the blood barken upon the cut—that saves plaster.

II. ˈbarken, a. Chiefly poet.
    [f. bark n.1 + -en4.]
    Made or consisting of bark.

1755 T. Forbes in C. Gist Jrnls. (1893) 148 Easter Tuesday we embarked..in about 300 Batteaus or Canoes (not barken). 1835 R. M. Bird Hawks of Hawk-h. I. v. 61 Perhaps some tall and tawny hunter..may yet..urge his barken canoe over some cypress-fringed pool. 1864 G. M. Hopkins Pilate in Note-Books (1937) 15 Then knot a barken band To hold me quite fix'd in the selfsame plight. 1890 Harper's Mag. Aug. 365 A sword-lunge of assailant thunder Slashed down thy barken mail.

Oxford English Dictionary

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