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

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  1.  Piled together.

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1833.  Loudon, Encycl. Archit., Gloss., Stacked, horsed.

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1870.  Standard, 12 Dec., 5/4. Those battalions that still remained and paced briskly to and fro by their stacked arms to warm themselves were kept for possible emergencies.

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1905.  Sir F. Treves, Other Side of Lantern, II. vii. (1906), 65. A place for stacked spears.

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  2.  Piled into a ‘stack’ (senses 2, 3).

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1901.  Westm. Gaz., 17 Dec., 2/1. Clearings with stacked-up wood.

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1908.  Mary Johnston, Lewis Rand, i. 10. Stretches of stacked corn appeared like tented plains, brown and silent encampments of the autumn.

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  3.  Piled with goods.

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1908.  Academy, 8 Feb., 441/1. A stacked trolley obsessed the tram-lines.

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