marked

[ mahrkt ]
/ mɑrkt /

adjective

strikingly noticeable; conspicuous: with marked success.
watched as an object of suspicion or vengeance: a marked man.
having a mark or marks: beautifully marked birds; to read the marked pages.
Linguistics.
  1. (of a phoneme) characterized by the presence of a phonological feature that serves to distinguish it from an otherwise similar phoneme lacking that feature, as (d), which, in contrast to (t), is characterized by the presence of voicing.
  2. characterized by the presence of a marker indicating the grammatical function of a construction, as the plural in English, which, in contrast to the singular, is typically indicated by the presence of the marker -s.
  3. specifying an additional element of meaning, in contrast to a semantically related item, as drake in contrast to duck, where drake specifies “male” while duck does not necessarily specify sex.
  4. occurring less typically than an alternative form, as the word order in Down he fell in contrast to the more usual order of He fell down.Compare unmarked(def 2).

Origin of marked

Middle English; Old English gemearcod; see mark1, -ed2

OTHER WORDS FROM marked

mark·ed·ly [mahr-kid-lee] /ˈmɑr kɪd li/, adverb mark·ed·ness, noun half-marked, adjective well-marked, adjective

Example sentences from the Web for well-marked

British Dictionary definitions for well-marked (1 of 2)

well-marked

adjective (well marked when postpositive)

(of a path, trail, landmark, etc) clearly indicated or signposted

British Dictionary definitions for well-marked (2 of 2)

marked
/ (mɑːkt) /

adjective

obvious, evident, or noticeable
singled out, esp for punishment, killing, etc a marked man
linguistics distinguished by a specific feature, as in phonology. For example, of the two phonemes /t/ and /d/, the /d/ is marked because it exhibits the feature of voice

Derived forms of marked

markedly (ˈmɑːkɪdlɪ), adverb markedness, noun