English edit

Etymology edit

jewelry +‎ -ed

Adjective edit

jewelried (comparative more jewelried, superlative most jewelried)

  1. Adorned with jewelry.
    • 1982, Michael Tobias, Déva, a Novel, page 88:
      Up ahead three young bare-footed girls in goatskin attire and jewelried necks were moving their small flock with gnarled droving stocks quickly down the mountain.
    • 1987, Diane Ackerman, On Extended Wings: An Adventure in Flight, page 107:
      It draws ponytailed, bare-chested, heavily jewelried young men in a time warp from the Sixties.
    • 2010, Suzanne Strempek Shea, Around Again:
      Lucy was not only dressed for the day that had begun without me, but was made up and jewelried and perfumed and letting out spearminty breaths, smiling, too, happy and excited, and, well, normal—the last thing being the surprising part if you'd been there in the backyard with me not eight hours before.

Verb edit

jewelried

  1. simple past and past participle of jewelry