ppl. a. [f. TENEMENT + -ED1.] Let in tenements or separate dwellings: said of a building, house, or house property.

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1806.  E. W. Brayley, Views in Suffolk, etc., 35. During the harvest of 1782 or 1783, the village of Honington suffered severely by fire. Four or five double tenemented cottages, the parsonage-house and out-houses, a farm-house and all its appurtenances, were levelled in little more than half an hour.

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1883.  Pall Mall G., 17 Feb., 4/1. They have … crowded into tenemented property in the immediate neighbourhood. Ibid. (1888), 24 Nov., 5. Most of the population of Glasgow living in the rooms of tenemented buildings.

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1890.  Daily News, 18 July, 2/4. The Chancellor of the Exchequer … stated that tenemented houses of less than 20l. per annum were exempt from house duty whether they had two front doors or not, so long as they were intended to be dwelling-houses within seven and sixpence per week.

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