Made firm or determined; having been given definite limits or boundaries; resolved.
From Latin determinatus, past participle of determinare (to set bounds, limit). This is a more formal or archaic form, as modern English typically uses 'determined' instead of 'determinated.'
This word feels Shakespearean because it is—English speakers have largely abandoned -ated verb forms in favor of simpler -ed endings, which is why determinated sounds old-fashioned even though it's technically correct.
Complete word intelligence in one call. Free tier — 50 lookups/day.