[f. prec. sb.] trans. To furnish or construct with a cupola. Hence Cupolaed, cupola’d ppl. a.

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1615.  Coupled [see COUPLED ¶ at end].

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1644.  Evelyn, Diary, 22 Oct. Another rich ebony Cabinet cupola’d with a tortoise-shell.

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a. 1657.  Lovelace, Poems (1864), 209.

          Now hast thou chang’d thee, saint, and made
Thy self a fane that’s cupula’d.

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1673.  Ray, Journ. Low C. (1738), I. 246. Round rooms or halls cupulo’d.

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1837.  Disraeli, Venetia, V. i. The hallowed form of some cupolaed convent.

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1881.  Talmage, in N. Y. Witness, 13 April. The old structure will be … raised, and cupolaed, and enlarged.

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1886.  Shorthouse, Sir Percival, iii. The low cupolaed arch.

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