fashioned

Having a specified fashion or style

Adjective

  1. Having a specified fashion or style
    • It was neatly arranged with old fashioned furniture. - 2014, Z A Bukhari, This Love, →ISBN:
    • I've been thinking of that for a while; I was going to go with Island Fashioned or Eastern Fashion, but they both sound shit. - 2017, Jonathon Mcluskie, Thai Fashioned Trouble: Mr. Leopold, →ISBN:
  2. In style; fashionable.
    • It was there also that, untill 1783, the famous Carlin performed his italian jokes, then very fashioned , and to which, since, has succeeded nobler kind of plays. - 1846, J. C. G. MARIN DE P***, A Fortnight in Paris,...
    • I praised the tie of a ribbon, carelessly, the next afternoon, — declare it's every word true, sir ; — she met me in the evening with that very fashioned tie - 1855, Laura Greenwood, The Rural Wreath; Or, Life Among the...
    • I like the appearance of both those sisters very much: they look spirited & accomplished, & informed; they are both handsome, & have good figures, & a very fashioned look & manner. - 1972, Fanny Burney, Joyce Hemlow,...
  3. Well designed or put together.
    • “Transitionology” developed in Spain into a very fashioned discipline that left a strong footprint on the whole of Eastern and Central European studies. - 2012, Solidarity with Solidarity, →ISBN:
    • As I have mentioned earlier, your thoughts and emotions are functioning perfectly and must be using them in a very fashioned and orderly manner, if ever, guided by an Entity or an Angel spirit along the way if you find...
    • May not some books be more technically difficult to put together than others, and may not their raw material be less fashioned, less well prepared? - 2014, Pittard, Race & History, →ISBN:

Forms

more fashioned most fashioned

Hyponyms

fully-fashioned new-fashioned old-fashioned

Derived

fashionedness unfashioned

Verb

  1. simple past and past participle of fashion