ppl. a. Also -etted. [f. CORONET sb. (or v.) + -ED.] Adorned with, bearing, or wearing, a coronet; of persons, often equivalent to belonging to the peerage.
1748. Richardson, Clarissa (1811), V. 119. She looked at the seal, ostentatiously coroneted.
1847. L. Hunt, Men, Women, & B., II. ix. 197. The staid conduct of a succession of coronetted actresses.
a. 1853. Robertson, Lect., i. 24. The lady getting out of her coroneted carriage.
1872. Longstaffe, Her. Durham, 24. None of his own [Bp. de Burys] charming seals give the Coronetted Mitre.
1885. Lpool Daily Post, 30 June, 4/5. Coroneted eccentrics, who in other ranks would have been called other names.