ppl. a. [f. STOCKADE sb. or v. + -ED.] Protected with a stockade.

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1778.  T. Hutchins, Topogr. Descr. Virginia, etc. 29. Ouiatanon is a small stockaded fort.

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1834.  M. Scott, Cruise Midge, ii. The fort … was a stockaded enclosure.

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1908.  Sir H. Johnston, G. Grenfell & the Congo, I. xi. 197. They suddenly burst out of their own stockaded settlement on the rest of the town.

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  b.  Of an island: Artificially formed by driving piles into the bed of the water.

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1863.  Lyell, Antiq. Man, 30. These ‘stockaded islands,’ as they [i.e., Irish lake-dwellings] have been sometimes called.

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