ppl. a. [f. prec.] Purified by or as if by ventilation; provided with means of ventilation.

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1743.  S. Hales, Descr. Ventilators, I. 111. As ventilated Corn may lie thick without leaving any spare Room to turn it. Ibid. (1758), II. 110. That wet State will be more unwholsome in a close unventilated, than in a ventilated Ship.

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1840.  Civil Eng. & Arch. Jrnl., III. 363/1. The pieces of wood … so combined … [become] what the inventor terms a ‘Ventilated Faggot.’

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1868.  Chambers’s Encycl., X. 67/2. Close ill-ventilated apartments.

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1892.  Photogr. Ann., II. p. ccxxi. It is a Three-cornered Lamp; the back has a sliding ventilated door.

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  fig.  1736.  Thomson, Liberty, IV. 790. The wholesome winds Of Opposition hence began to blow…. A pestilential ministry they purge, And ventilated states renew their bloom.

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