| englanti |
lamaantunut, järkyttynyt, huumaantunut
pihkassa, hulluna oleva
affectVerb Affected by an act of smitingNoun smiting.
(quote-book), for, and at the expense of the author|year=1850|page=30|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=iJBeAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA30|oclc=156061314|passage=A smited man is a man struck; a smitten man is a man affected by the act of smiting: (..)
(quote-book)
(quote-book)|year=1997|page=250|isbn=978-0-684-83331-6|passage=The Bible shows the way of God with man and the way of man with God. It contains both the complaint of God against the wicked and the shriek of the smitten man, demanding justice of God.
(quote-book)|year=2010|page=175|isbn=978-1-58983-480-4|passage=When the alternate designation is introduced, turning the character from “man” or “brother” to “his smiter,” this balance is disturbed, and suddenly we have a smiter and a smitten person, not two people in a fight with each other.
Made irrationally enthusiastic.
(quote-journal)&93;|year=1980|page=26|oclc=19547989|passage=One of the side benefits of such has been making the acquaintances of similarly smitten enthusiasts, and inevitably they are keen to share both plants and experiences.
(quote-journal)|year=1981|volume=118|page=147|issn=0040-781X|passage=Welcome to the world of the (w) addict, that 100,000-strong armada of hopelessly smitten enthusiasts who insist that nothing in life quite measures up to the unrestrained joy of breezing along on a twin-hulled Hobie.
in love|In love.
1912, Thomas Holmes, “Marriage in the Underworld”, in Londons Underworld'' (The Making of the Modern Law), London: w:J. M. Dent|J. M. Dent & Sons; New York, N.Y.: (w), (w) http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/60735063 60735063; republished as London; New York, N.Y.: Anthem Press, 2006, Special:BookSources/9781843312192 ISBN 978-1-84331-219-2, page 118:
- At the end of the long procession came a smitten woman. (..) I think of the women who have fastened the tendrils of their heart's affection round unworthy men, and have married them, hoping, trusting and believing that their love and influence would be powerful enough to win the men to sobriety and virtue. Alas! how mistaken they have been!
(quote-book)|year=1997|page=119|isbn=978-0-7735-1614-4|passage=In “The Soldier Maid,” a woman falls in love with the cross-dressed woman, thinking she is a man. The smitten woman, then, perceives herself in heterosexual mode – though the person to whom she is attracted is actually female.
(inflection of).
(inflection of)
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