<span class="searchmatch">laugh'd</span> (obsolete) simple past and past participle of laugh...
of Rural Life and Scenery, London: Taylor and Hessey, p. 87,[1] Who’s <span class="searchmatch">laugh’d</span> at too by every whelp, For failings which she cannot help? But silly fools...
of Aulus Persius Flaccus. […], London: […] Jacob Tonson […], →OCLC: One <span class="searchmatch">laugh'd</span> at follies, one lamented crimes. express grief bewail lamentability lamentable...
and Epeüs ſeized the clod. / He ſwung, he caſt it, and the Greecians <span class="searchmatch">laugh'd</span>. / Leonteus, branch of Mars, quoited it next. ^ Bingham, Caleb (1808) “Improprieties...
seriously?" The simple past tense forms laught, <span class="searchmatch">laugh'd</span> and low and the past participles laught, <span class="searchmatch">laugh'd</span> and laughen also exist, but are obsolete. † Archaic...
babe, who rear’d his creasy arms, Caught at and ever miss’d it, and they <span class="searchmatch">laugh’d</span>: 1891, Mary Eleanor Wilkins Freeman, “The Twelfth Guest”, in A New England...
Dryden, The Medall. A Satyre against Sedition[2], lines 145–8: The Man who <span class="searchmatch">laugh'd</span> but once, to see an Ass Mumbling to make the cross-grained Thistles pass...