minded

English

Etymology

From mind + -ed. Compare Old English -mōd (minded), Old English ġehyġd (minded; disposed).

Adjective

minded (comparative more minded, superlative most minded)

  1. (in combination, usually hyphenated) Having or exemplifying a mind of the stated type, nature or inclination.
    a fair-minded person
    a fair-minded decision
    literary-minded, literature-minded, two-minded
    • 2004 October 29, Carol McAlice Currie, “Unposted laws make downtown seem unwelcoming”, in Statesman Journal, volume 152, number 214, Salem, OR, page 1C:
      Downtown merchants can’t condone sending the spend-minded to Lancaster Mall, where they can park without fear in mega-macadam lots.
  2. Having a preference for doing something; having a likelihood, or disposition to carry out an act.
    I am minded to refuse the request.
    Order another drink if you are so minded
    He seems minded to go ahead with the plan.

Derived terms

Translations

Verb

minded

  1. simple past and past participle of mind

References

Anagrams

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