a. Obs. (? exc. dial.) Also 7 wainded. [f. WAND sb. + -ED2.]

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  1.  Made of wicker-work. Of a bottle: Cased in wicker-work, wickered.

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1567.  Richmond Wills (Surtees), 197. In the lawe buttrye—barrells, aile potts, wanded bottles. Ibid. (1574), 251. I will and gyve to my lord Scroope and my laydye his wife … one wanded skeppe to put breade in. Ibid. (1575), 255. In the lawe chambre … j wandyt creile.

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1652.  Depos. Cast. York (Surtees), 56. She did there give him a drinke out of a wainded botle.

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1653.  Knaresb. Wills (Surtees), II. 204. In the West Parlour … I wanded chaire.

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1677.  Coles, Dict. Eng.-Lat., A Wanded chair, cathedra viminea semicircularis.

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1770.  J. Coates’s Coll. Poems, 19. She, plac’d in wanded chair, all pale appear’d.

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  b.  Of a building: Wattled. (Cf. wand-church, WAND sb. 12.)

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1593.  Rites & Mon. Ch. Durh. (Surtees), 57. From the wandyd kirke or chapell they brought the body of that holie man Sancte Cuthbert and translayted him into an other White Kirke.

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  2.  Of cattle: ? Brindled.

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1713.  Lond. Gaz., No. 5126/12. Stoln … 4 red Oxen,… one is more wanded than the others.

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