[f. prec. sb.]
1. trans. To provide barracks for; to locate in barracks.
1701. Luttrell, Brief Rel., V. 101. Prince Eugene has demanded 30,000 planks for barracking his troops.
1872. Echo, 1 Oct., 4. When men are not barracked, when military service implies nothing but home defence.
2. intr. To lodge in barracks.
1834. H. Miller, Scenes & Leg., xxxii. (1857), 478. A small recruiting party barracked in one of the neighbouring lanes.