Placed in or provided with a seat; seated or situated in a particular position.
From en- (prefix meaning 'to cause to be') + seat (from Old English setl, meaning a place to sit). The suffix -ed indicates a past participle or adjective form describing something that has been given a seat.
This archaic word shows how English loves adding prefixes to verbs to create new meanings—'en-' literally means 'to put into' or 'to cause to be,' so 'enseated' means someone or something has been positioned in a seat or place of sitting.
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