ppl. a. [f. TACK v.1 + -ED1.] Attached, appended, etc.: see TACK v.1

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1596.  Warner, Alb. Eng., XII. lxxiii. (1612), 303. Hence Dispensations, Iubilees, Pardons, and such tack’t geere, Were had at Rome.

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1687.  T. Ludford, in Magd. Coll. (O.H.S.), 75. His answer … was drawn up in tacked schedules.

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1692.  Luttrell, Brief Rel. (1857), II. 363. After a long debate about the tackt clause, [the lords] adjourned it further till Munday.

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1693.  Dryden, Juvenal’s Sat. (1697), p. xxxvi. Laws were also call’d Leges Saturæ; when they were of several Heads and Titles; like our tack’d Bills of Parliament.

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1904.  Westm. Gaz., 9 Sept., 3/2. The tacked-on happy conclusion of ‘Merely Mary Ann.’

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