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Definition of fermented:
Synonyms:
hard, soured.
-
deranged (part of speech: verb)
- disorganized,
- whisked,
- confounded,
- mussed,
- confused,
- ruffled,
- meddled,
- mislaid,
- scattered,
- misplaced,
- tumbled,
- convulsed,
- rumpled,
- upset,
- whipped,
- discomposed,
- tousled,
- capsized,
- rummaged,
- botched,
- displaced,
- disturbed,
- troubled,
- tampered,
- roiled,
- jumbled,
- mixed up muddled,
- perturbed,
- rippled,
- cluttered,
- agitated,
- swirled,
- disarranged,
- hashed,
- deranged,
- blurred,
- roughened,
- disheveled,
- scrambled,
- tossed,
- dislocated,
- messed,
- disordered,
- churned
-
motivated (part of speech: verb)
- induced,
- threw,
- encouraged,
- knocked,
- catapulted,
- fired,
- forced,
- launched,
- urged,
- provoked,
- jerked,
- nudged,
- magnetized,
- poked,
- pitched,
- heaved,
- fomented,
- instigated,
- driven,
- shoved,
- slung,
- stimulated,
- thrust,
- flung,
- propelled,
- hurled,
- energized,
- bumped,
- triggered,
- prompted,
- jogged,
- motivated,
- struck,
- stricken,
- punched,
- prodded,
- jostled,
- enticed,
- moved,
- shot,
- pushed,
- hurtled,
- goaded,
- drove,
- hastened,
- rammed,
- thrown,
- impelled,
- inspired,
- jolted,
- lobbed
Usage examples:
-
Polluted water, no doubt, contributed to the prevalent sickness in the summer months, whereas the fermented and distilled waters disposed of impurities before they were ready for consumption and, thus, assured to imbibers a degree of safety from germ- bred diseases.
- "Domestic Life in Virginia in the Seventeenth Century Jamestown 350th Anniversary Historical Booklet Number 17", Annie Lash Jester. -
He remained on board the vessel till the hour of dinner, of which he partook with the Spaniards, expressing his satisfaction at the strange dishes, and especially pleased with the wine, which he pronounced far superior to the fermented liquors of his own country.
- "History-of-the-Conquest-of-Peru-with-a-preliminary-view-of-the-civilization-of-the-Incas", Prescott, William Hickling. -
And this leads me to observe, that it is a common mistake to suppose that, because a woman is nursing, she ought therefore to live very fully, and to add an allowance of wine, porter, or other fermented liquor, to her usual diet.
- "The Maternal Management of Children, in Health and Disease.", Thomas Bull, M.D..