Stu·pe·fied a. Having been made stupid.
  ◄ ►
  Stu·pe·fy v. t. [imp. & p. p. Stupefied p. pr. & vb. n. Stupefying ]  [Written also stupify, especially in England.]
  1. To make stupid; to make dull; to blunt the faculty of perception or understanding in; to deprive of sensibility; to make torpid.
     The fumes of drink discompose and stupefy the brain.   --South.
  2. To deprive of material mobility. [Obs.]
     It is not malleable; but yet is not fluent, but stupefied.   --Bacon.
  ◄ ►
  stupefy
       v 1: make dull or stupid or muddle with drunkenness or
            infatuation [syn: besot]
       2: be a mystery or bewildering to; "This beats me!"; "Got me--I
          don't know the answer!"; "a vexing problem"; "This
          question really stuck me" [syn: perplex, vex, stick,
           get, puzzle, mystify, baffle, beat, pose, bewilder,
           flummox, nonplus, gravel, amaze, dumbfound]
       3: make senseless or dizzy by or as if by a blow; "stun fish"
          [syn: stun]
       [also: stupefied]
  stupefied
       adj 1: as if struck dumb with astonishment and surprise; "a circle
              of policement stood dumbfounded by her denial of
              having seen the accident"; "the flabbergasted aldermen
              were speechless"; "was thunderstruck by the news of
              his promotion" [syn: dumbfounded, dumfounded, flabbergasted,
               thunderstruck]
       2: in a state of mental numbness especially as resulting from
          shock; "he had a dazed expression on his face"; "lay
          semiconscious, stunned (or stupefied) by the blow"; "was
          stupid from fatigue" [syn: dazed, stunned, stupid(p)]