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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
changed
adjective
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
changed lanes
▪ That idiot changed lanes without signalling.
changed tack
▪ Rudy changed tack, his tone suddenly becoming friendly.
changed...diaper
▪ I changed her diaper.
changed...name by deed poll
▪ Steve changed his name by deed poll to Elvis Presley-Smith.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ NOUN
circumstances
▪ She adopted the name Hertha, perhaps to indicate her changed circumstances.
▪ Clearly all organisations, if they are to be successful need to adapt to changed circumstances.
▪ Under changed circumstances, implicit themes, both justificatory and critical, could be jerked into argumentative explicitness.
▪ To occasion change, then, requires a willingness to respond to changed perceptions, and changed circumstances.
▪ It could be conveniently set aside in the changed circumstances after James V's death, when the real issue became clear.
▪ There is the danger that the plan becomes fossilised, static and unresponsive to new intelligence or other changed circumstances.
▪ Ordering her would be ludicrous under the changed circumstances, and in any event, a waste of time.
▪ What are they to do in the changed circumstances?
hand
▪ Pye's own estate lay in disputed territory which changed hands at least twice.
▪ In the former case there were no restrictions and thus land changed hands at the full market price.
▪ It may have changed hands as often as eight times in a period of twenty years.
▪ Some 6.5m shares are said to have changed hands in two hours.
▪ In 1986, about 1.78million properties worth £73billion changed hands.
▪ Money may not have changed hands.
▪ Only when he stooped and some lire changed hands did she realise that he must be intending to walk back.
▪ The ownership of all three of Chrysler's carpet suppliers, for instance, changed hands within one year.
man
▪ He lives only for the moment, and he is already a changed man.
▪ Ian says from then on Robert has been a changed man - withdrawn and completely unapproachable.
▪ He's a changed man since Mum went into hospital.
▪ But when he came home he was a changed man.
▪ He emerged from the opera house a changed man.
▪ It was from that time, his friends judged, that he became a changed man.
▪ He spent three months there and came out a changed man.
▪ A tough Southern youth returns from the front a changed man.
situation
▪ She was trying to grasp the radically changed situation with which she must come to terms.
▪ A changed situation may be welcomed as a release from such suffering, although not without mixed feelings.
▪ We must take action to deal with the changed situation we presently face.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Even the March sun looks changed as it splinters off the chrome on the fold-away camp bed.
▪ The machine controls caused power to be applied and consequences to occur which resulted in changed readings on the instruments.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Changed

Change \Change\ (ch[=a]nj), v. t. [imp. & p. p. Changed (ch[=a]njd); p. pr. & vb. n. Changing.] [F. changer, fr. LL. cambiare, to exchange, barter, L. cambire. Cf. Cambial.]

  1. To alter; to make different; to cause to pass from one state to another; as, to change the position, character, or appearance of a thing; to change the countenance.

    Therefore will I change their glory into shame.
    --Hosea. iv. 7.

  2. To alter by substituting something else for, or by giving up for something else; as, to change the clothes; to change one's occupation; to change one's intention.

    They that do change old love for new, Pray gods, they change for worse!
    --Peele.

  3. To give and take reciprocally; to exchange; -- followed by with; as, to change place, or hats, or money, with another.

    Look upon those thousands with whom thou wouldst not, for any interest, change thy fortune and condition.
    --Jer. Taylor.

  4. Specifically: To give, or receive, smaller denominations of money (technically called change) for; as, to change a gold coin or a bank bill.

    He pulled out a thirty-pound note and bid me change it.
    --Goldsmith.

    To change a horse, or To change hand (Man.), to turn or bear the horse's head from one hand to the other, from the left to right, or from the right to the left.

    To change hands, to change owners.

    To change one's tune, to become less confident or boastful.

    To change step, to take a break in the regular succession of steps, in marching or walking, as by bringing the hollow of one foot against the heel of the other, and then stepping off with the foot which is in advance.

    Syn: To alter; vary; deviate; substitute; innovate; diversify; shift; veer; turn. See Alter.

Wiktionary
changed

vb. (en-past of: change)

WordNet
changed
  1. adj. made or become different in nature or form; "changed attitudes"; "changed styles of dress"; "a greatly changed country after the war" [ant: unchanged]

  2. made or become different in some respect; "he's an altered (or changed) man since his election to Congress"

  3. changed in constitution or structure or composition by metamorphism; "metamorphic rocks"

Wikipedia
Changed (album)

Changed is the eighth studio album by American country music group Rascal Flatts. It is their second studio album release after signing with Big Machine Records, and was released on April 3, 2012. The band released the album's debut single, " Banjo," on January 16, 2012. The album's second single " Come Wake Me Up" released to country radio in May 21, 2012. The album's third single, " Changed," released to country radio on December 17, 2012, AC and Christian AC on January 22, 2013. On June 28, 2013, Rascal Flatts released "Sunrise" as their first official single in the UK.

Changed (song)

"Changed" is a song recorded by American country music group Rascal Flatts. It was released in December 2012 as the third single from their eighth studio album, Changed. The song was written by Gary LeVox, Wendell Mobley and Neil Thrasher. It was released to country radio on December 17, 2012 and AC and Christian AC radio on January 22, 2013.

Usage examples of "changed".

The personnel of the lowest floor changed so constantly I was unlikely to be questioned.

The constellations that shone from the darkened ceiling changed perceptibly as the planet itself turned round its primary.

He changed his tactics and reassured me that he knew the limits of his strength.

The menace of the raiding Mil might well have consolidated and changed everything.

The trail he followed changed its pattern and he guessed that the other mare had dropped to a trot.

His name's been changed to Askell Klonski, and he does live in a fancy part of town.

He smiled at her, and his face changed from an austere mask to that of a warm and charming man.

Ken lifted off his chair and Todd stared at her as if she had suddenly changed shape.

Ali had not changed in all the years Todd had known him, except for a little more grey in his hair and beard.

The view changed to a much closer image of the great ship, which steadily filled more and more of the screen.

Look, Nor," and her brother's mood changed state completely, "I need to see Felicity.

Clas said in that poisonously quiet tone she'd heard him use before he changed the state of some unwary underclassman.

She was too weary to help as he cleaned her, changed the soiled sheets.

At first, he thought it was caused by the light --the sky had already changed with the approach of the storm.

While the ARCT-10, like her sister ships in the Exploratory and Evaluation Corps, had a basic administrative and operations personnel who were ship-born and ship-bred, the complement of additional specialists, trainees and, occasionally, high echelon travelers for the Federated Sentient Planets changed continually, giving the ship-bred the stimulation of meeting members of other cultures, sub-groups, minorities and persuasions.