ppl. a. [f. CANOPY sb. or v. + -ED.] Covered with, or as with, a canopy.

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1593.  Shaks., Lucr., 398 (1594), D ij b. Her eyes … canopied in darkenesse sweetly lay.

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1611.  Chapman, Iliad, XIII. (R.). Mars … Sad canapied with golden clouds.

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1796.  Morse, Amer. Geog., II. 550. Palanquins … a kind of canopied couches.

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1870.  Lowell, Among My Books, Ser. I. (1873), 196. These saints of literature descend from their canopied remoteness.

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  b.  Arch. (Cf. CANOPY sb. 3.)

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1849.  Freeman, Archit., 296. Rows of canopied niches.

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1879.  Sir G. Scott, Lect. Archit., I. 182. A graceful canopied and crocketed panel to each intervening pier.

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