ppl. a. [f. BOARD v. + -ED1.]

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  1.  Made of or furnished with boards or planks.

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1444.  Test. Ebor. (1855), II. 100. Lego eidem optimum bordetbed in le withdrawyng-chaumbre cum curtens pendentibus circa idem.

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1557.  Boorde, Sleep, in Babees Bk. (1868), 248. Nor lye in no lowe Chambre, excepte it be boorded.

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1662.  Gerbier, Princ. (1665), 29. The first Stories ought rather to be vaulted than boarded.

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1769.  Priestley, in Phil. Trans., LIX. 65. A dry boarded floor.

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1806.  A. Duncan, Nelson’s Fun., 13. A boarded partition … was erected.

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  2.  Bound in boards.

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1842.  Penny Mag., XI. 381. A boarded book is attached to its covers … by the boards being pasted to the blank leaves.

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  3.  Provided with board (i.e., stated meals) as a lodger at another person’s house.

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1884.  H. M. Stanley, in Pall Mall Gaz., 8 Aug., 1/2. Boarded justice would soon become mockery.

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