windowed

Valid in Scrabble

Scrabble points
16
Words With Friends
17
Letters
8

Definition of windowed

3 senses · 2 parts of speech · etymology included

adj

  1. (not-comparable)Fitted with windows, often of a particular kind or, in (heraldry), of a specified colour.
    “Poor naked wretches, wheresoe’er you are, That bide the pelting of this pitiless storm, How shall your houseless heads and unfed sides, Your loop’d and window’d raggedness, defend you From seasons such as these?”
    “1712, The Spectator, No. 276, Wednesday, January 16, 1712, Dublin: W. Wilson, 1778, Volume IV, p. 103, You must have seen a strange windowed house near Hyde-Park, which is so built that no one can look out of any of the apartments […]”
    “I need not say that my thoughts were chiefly with her as I leaned from the lattice, and let my eye roam, now over the walks and borders of the garden, now along the many-windowed front of the house which rose white beyond the masses of foliage.”
    “Loud the happy children quire To the golden-windowed morn; While the lord of their desire Sleeps below the crimson thorn.”
    “The walls below are bare, but for a few glazed bricks and a peculiar three-windowed bay that reminds one of a villa in Clapham.”
See all 3 definitions

adj

  1. (not-comparable)Fitted with windows, often of a particular kind or, in (heraldry), of a specified colour.
    “Poor naked wretches, wheresoe’er you are, That bide the pelting of this pitiless storm, How shall your houseless heads and unfed sides, Your loop’d and window’d raggedness, defend you From seasons such as these?”
    “1712, The Spectator, No. 276, Wednesday, January 16, 1712, Dublin: W. Wilson, 1778, Volume IV, p. 103, You must have seen a strange windowed house near Hyde-Park, which is so built that no one can look out of any of the apartments […]”
    “I need not say that my thoughts were chiefly with her as I leaned from the lattice, and let my eye roam, now over the walks and borders of the garden, now along the many-windowed front of the house which rose white beyond the masses of foliage.”
    “Loud the happy children quire To the golden-windowed morn; While the lord of their desire Sleeps below the crimson thorn.”
    “The walls below are bare, but for a few glazed bricks and a peculiar three-windowed bay that reminds one of a villa in Clapham.”
  2. (not-comparable)Occupying only a part of the screen (in a window.)
    “This game can be played both in windowed mode and in full-screen mode.”

verb

  1. (form-of, participle, past)simple past and past participle of window

Definitions from Wiktionary, CC BY-SA.

Etymology

From Middle English wyndowed, wyndowid, equivalent to window + -ed.

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