ppl. a. [f. TACK v.1 + -ED1.] Attached, appended, etc.: see TACK v.1
1596. Warner, Alb. Eng., XII. lxxiii. (1612), 303. Hence Dispensations, Iubilees, Pardons, and such tackt geere, Were had at Rome.
1687. T. Ludford, in Magd. Coll. (O.H.S.), 75. His answer was drawn up in tacked schedules.
1692. Luttrell, Brief Rel. (1857), II. 363. After a long debate about the tackt clause, [the lords] adjourned it further till Munday.
1693. Dryden, Juvenals Sat. (1697), p. xxxvi. Laws were also calld Leges Saturæ; when they were of several Heads and Titles; like our tackd Bills of Parliament.
1904. Westm. Gaz., 9 Sept., 3/2. The tacked-on happy conclusion of Merely Mary Ann.