attituded
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology 1
[edit]From attitude (“noun”) + -ed.
Adjective
[edit]attituded (comparative more attituded, superlative most attituded)
- Having an attitude.
- 1988, Jim Thomas, Prisoner Litigation: The Paradox of the Jailhouse Lawyer[1], page 234:
- [GM:] If he feels that he's not getting [service], then he might just change clerks, you know, get a better attituded clerk, one who will work better.
- 2010, John Donald Wade, “Southern Humor”, in Donald Davidson, editor, Selected Essays and Other Writings of John Donald Wade, page 57:
- They know that the southerner is in many ways bilingual, bi-mental, bi (if I may say so) attituded; he speaks his own language and the dialect, his own thoughts and the Negro's thoughts; he has a sentiment for the Negro that the northerner cannot diagmose except as detestation and at the same time a sentiment for him that the northerner cannot diagnose except as affection.
Etymology 2
[edit]See attitude (verb)
Verb
[edit]attituded
- simple past and past participle of attitude