double-jabbed
English
    
    Alternative forms
    
- double jabbed
Adjective
    
double-jabbed (not comparable)
- (UK, neologism) Of a person, having received both doses (jabs) of a COVID vaccine
-  2021 May 7, Paul Waugh, “Double-Jabbed Adults Will No Longer Have To Isolate At Home After Covid ‘Contact’”, in Huffington Post UK:- Double-jabbed adults will no longer be forced to isolate at home after coming into contact with someone with Covid, Boris Johnson has declared.
 
-  2021 July 8, Hamish Mackay; Alex Kleiderman, “Covid-19: Amber list quarantine for fully vaccinated to end on 19 July”, in BBC News:- The requirement for double-jabbed people to isolate after contact with a positive case is due to end on 16 August, four weeks after the majority of England's Covid rules are set to end, to allow more people to be vaccinated.
 
-  2021 July 13, Elsa Maishman, “Covid Scotland: Self-isolation requirement to be scrapped for double jabbed from August 9”, in The Scotsman:- Self-isolation will also be removed for arrivals from Amber list countries from July 19, if they have been double jabbed within a UK vaccine programme.
 
-  2021 July 14, Ellie Cambridge, “Two-thirds of British adults now double jabbed as Boris beats Freedom Day target”, in The Sun:- It comes just days before Freedom Day, with ministers urging everyone to get double jabbed.
 
-  2021 July 16, Sophie Morris, “COVID-19: Travellers frustrated at 'chaotic' government U-turn over France quarantine rule”, in Sky News:- Graham McLeod, from Bolton, who has been staying on on France's Atlantic coast, said he would also have to isolate despite being double-jabbed.
 
-  2022 October 26, Lilian Cheng, Fiona Sun, and Danny Mok, “Full-day primary classes to resume if 70pc double-jabbed”, in South China Morning Post, Hong Kong, page A1:- Starting yesterday, primary schools can arrange extracurricular activities for pupils double-jabbed for more than two weeks after classes or during the other half of a school day.
 
 
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