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slidden

  1. (archaic) past participle of slide
    • 1892, Herman Melville, White Jacket[1]:
      These are ponderous flat stones with long ropes at each end, by which the stones are slidden about, to and fro, over the wet and sanded decks; a most wearisome, dog-like, galley-slave employment.
    • 1898, Marshall Mather, Lancashire Idylls (1898)[2]:
      In a minute more the spell of silence broke, and a roar, louder than before, told that the little one had touched earth without injury, save hands all raw from friction with the rope along which she had slidden.

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