ppl. a. [f. CANOPY sb. or v. + -ED.] Covered with, or as with, a canopy.
1593. Shaks., Lucr., 398 (1594), D ij b. Her eyes canopied in darkenesse sweetly lay.
1611. Chapman, Iliad, XIII. (R.). Mars Sad canapied with golden clouds.
1796. Morse, Amer. Geog., II. 550. Palanquins a kind of canopied couches.
1870. Lowell, Among My Books, Ser. I. (1873), 196. These saints of literature descend from their canopied remoteness.
b. Arch. (Cf. CANOPY sb. 3.)
1849. Freeman, Archit., 296. Rows of canopied niches.
1879. Sir G. Scott, Lect. Archit., I. 182. A graceful canopied and crocketed panel to each intervening pier.