ppl. a. [f. BOARD v. + -ED1.]
1. Made of or furnished with boards or planks.
1444. Test. Ebor. (1855), II. 100. Lego eidem optimum bordetbed in le withdrawyng-chaumbre cum curtens pendentibus circa idem.
1557. Boorde, Sleep, in Babees Bk. (1868), 248. Nor lye in no lowe Chambre, excepte it be boorded.
1662. Gerbier, Princ. (1665), 29. The first Stories ought rather to be vaulted than boarded.
1769. Priestley, in Phil. Trans., LIX. 65. A dry boarded floor.
1806. A. Duncan, Nelsons Fun., 13. A boarded partition was erected.
2. Bound in boards.
1842. Penny Mag., XI. 381. A boarded book is attached to its covers by the boards being pasted to the blank leaves.
3. Provided with board (i.e., stated meals) as a lodger at another persons house.
1884. H. M. Stanley, in Pall Mall Gaz., 8 Aug., 1/2. Boarded justice would soon become mockery.