1. keyed - Adjective
2. keyed - Verb
3. keyed - Adjective Satellite
Furnished with keys; as, a keyed instrument; also, set to a key, as a tune.
Source: Webster's dictionaryI'd rather fiddle with my phone for precious seconds than neglect an apostrophe; I'd rather insert a word laboriously keyed out than resort to predictive texting for a - acceptable to some - synonym. Will Self
Maybe the example of Southern fiction writing has been so powerful that Southern poets have sort of keyed themselves to that. Robert Morgan
Americans are so tense and keyed up that it is impossible even to put them to sleep with a sermon. Norman Vincent Peale
a keyed instrument Source: Internet
the locks have not yet been keyed Source: Internet
A cryptography-savvy reader will notice some similarities between challenge-response approaches that use keyed cryptographic one-way functions, and USM authentication protocol. Source: Internet