Citations:mangoed

past form of mango

 * 1966, Nelson Bentley, Sea lion caves: and other poems, volume 1, page 12:
 * From musked and mangoed rain
 * Serenely rose the great blue crane,
 * Whose ragged agent rode each mail's margin
 * With notes for old Watkin:
 * The ageless wader pointed toward Japan.

??? (1)

 * 2005, Karen Traviss, The World Before, page 265:
 * “I think we out-mangoed her.”
 * the context isn't all that helpful, but suggests that the verb has to do with intentionally releasing pheromones and scents

made to taste or smell of mangoes?

 * 2003, Wayne Powers, Like Lazarus I Came Forth: Poems (ISBN: 0595270719), page 86:
 * your dreadlocks passionately flying about your head like a crown of thorns
 * you sleep in fits of breath that rise and fall as air escapes your mangoed lips—
 * i taste them


 * 2010, Omise'eke Natasha Tinsley, Thiefing Sugar: Eroticism Between Women in Caribbean Literature, page 189:
 * the girlfriends drinking and wave-riding their way to a pleasurably polymorphous connection to Jamaican lands and waters, one as infused with physical, emotional, and cultural expansiveness as their mangoed skin. And covered in juices,

having mangoes?

 * 2012, Michael Tritico, Dominica, the Dark Island: A Misadventure in Eden With Zombies, page 4:
 * Where is beautiful, quiet, peaceful, ecologically fascinating, mangoed, mountained, green, green, green, and southeast? I went to the libraries and started checking them out, books and islands.

??? (2)

 * 1997, Harris B. Stewart, The unpredictable mistress: intimate glimpses, page 104:
 * As we approached, the record player that hung on bongee cord from the overhead in the lab was turned up to full volume, Bill Menard, well wigged and mangoed, sat in my lap. The two other "girls" walked among the revelers chatting