ppl. a. [f. STAKE v.1 + -ED1.] In senses of the verb. Staked-and-bound: cf. STAKE sb.1 2 b.

1

1531.  Rec. St. Mary at Hill (1905), 37. Item, a stakyd fforme vjd.

2

1852.  R. S. Surtees, Sponge’s Sp. Tour (1893), 375. Now for the wall! It’s five feet high … in the staked-out part.

3

1861.  Whyte-Melville, Mkt. Harb., xxv. The last obstacle … consists of two ditches and a strong staked-and-bound fence on a bank.

4

1863.  Lyell, Antiq. Man, 30. A staked inclosure had been raised round the cabin.

5

1865.  Alex. Smith, Summer in Skye, I. 155. Women in white caps … sat beside a staked cow or pony.

6