fee-ed[pounounced as English ‘feed’]verbhired for a time as a farm-worker:...a handsome young Highlander who was fee-ed at a nearby farm, fell head over heels for the whimisical lass...15-. etymology: Scots; from fees ‘a servant’s wages, especially those paid half-yearly or for specific services’; attested by JSnote:
Canadian Paul Pope (2013) cites to fee which he defines as ‘to hire oneself out to a farmer’.