Obs. rare. [f. prec.]

1

  1.  trans. To furnish with windows (see WINDOWED 1) or window-like openings.

2

a. 1639.  Wotton, Panegyr. K. Charles, in Reliq. (1651), 133. If Nature her self (the first Architectress) had (to use an expression of Vitruvius) windowed your brest.

3

1728.  Pope, Dunc., II. 43. She form’d this image of well-body’d air; With pert flat eyes she window’d well its head.

4

  2.  To place in a window.

5

1606.  Shaks., Ant. & Cl., IV. xiv. 72. Would’st thou be window’d in great Rome, and see Thy Master thus…?

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