Na"ked (?), a. [AS. nacod; akin to D. naakt, G. nackt, OHG. nacchot, nahhot, Icel.
nökviðr,
nakinn, Sw. naken, Dan. nögen, Goth. naqaþs, Lith. nůgas, Russ. nagii, L. nudus,
Skr. nagna. √266. Cf. Nude.]
1. Having no clothes on; uncovered; nude; bare; as, a naked body; a naked limb; a naked sword.
2. Having no means of defense or protection; open; unarmed; defenseless.
Thy power is
full naked.
Chaucer.
Behold my bosom naked to your swords.
Addison. 3. Unprovided with needful or desirable accessories, means
of sustenance, etc.; destitute; unaided; bare.
Patriots who had exposed themselves for the public, and whom they
say now left naked.
Milton. 4. Without addition, exaggeration, or excuses; not concealed or disguised; open to view; manifest; plain.
The truth
appears so naked on my side, That any purblind eye may find it out.
Shak. All things are naked and opened unto the eyes of him with whom we to do.
Heb. iv. 13.
5. Mere; simple; plain.
The very naked name of love.
Shak. 6. (Bot.)
Without pubescence; as, a naked leaf or stem;
bare, or not
covered by the customary parts, as a flower without a perianth, a stem without leaves, seeds without a pericarp, buds without bud scales.
7. (Mus.) Not having the full complement of tones; -- said of a chord of only
two tones, which requires a third tone
to be sounded with them to
make the combination pleasing to the ear; as, a naked fourth or fifth.
Naked bed, a bed the occupant of which is naked, no night linen being worn in
ancient times. Shak. -- Naked eye, the eye alone, unaided by glasses, or by telescope, microscope,
or the like. -- Naked-eyed medusa. (Zoöl.) See Hydromedusa. -- Naked flooring (Carp.), the timberwork which supports
a floor. Gwilt. --
Naked mollusk
(Zoöl.), a nudibranch. -- Naked wood (Bot.), a large rhamnaceous tree (Colibrina reclinata) of
Southern Florida and the West Indies, having a hard and heavy heartwood, which takes a fine polish. C. S. Sargent.
Syn. -- Nude; bare; denuded; uncovered; unclothed; exposed; unarmed; plain; defenseless.