English

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Pronunciation

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Etymology 1

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From skin (noun) +‎ -ed (having).

Adjective

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skinned (not comparable)

  1. Having skin.
    1. (in combination) Having a specific type of skin.
      • 1969, “Guide to Buying Fruit”, in “Buying, Storing, and Preparing”, in Better Homes and Gardens Salad Book, New York, N.Y.; Des Moines, Ia.: Better Homes and Gardens Books, published 1970 (2nd printing), page 146, column 1:
        Kiwi: Kiwi fruits are imported from New Zealand. Sometimes called Chinese gooseberries, these brown fuzzy-skinned fruits will be soft to the touch, like an avocado, when ripe. To serve this fruit, peel and slice.
  2. Covered in a thin membrane resembling skin.
Derived terms
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Etymology 2

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From skin (to remove skin, verb) +‎ -ed (suffix forming past tenses).

Verb

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skinned

  1. simple past and past participle of skin

Adjective

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skinned (not comparable)

  1. Having skin (or similar outer layer) totally or partially removed.
    My skinned knuckles hurt until the scrape healed.
  2. (slang) Stripped of money or property.
Translations
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See also

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  NODES
Note 1