ppl. a. [f. FOLIAGE sb. and v. + -ED.]

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  1.  Decorated or ornamented with the representation of foliage.

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1754.  A. Drummond, Trav., ii. 58. There is in this place one very great square, in the middle of which appears an huge composite foliaged column, sustaining a statue of pope Alexander VII, sitting in his chair.

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a. 1763.  Shenstone, Economy, III. 40.

                    Replete with dust
The foliag’d velvet.

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1831.  Fraser’s Mag., IV. Oct., 282/1. The foliaged frieze re-echoing, as nearly as possible, the idea of the capital.

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  2.  Covered or furnished with (natural) foliage.

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1815.  Shelley, Alastor, 463.

                    Some inconstant star
Between one foliaged lattice twinkling fair.

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1859.  K. Cornwallis, New World, I. 175. The trunks were charred, but their foliaged tops had escaped the fiery element, and were still green and luxuriant—offering a singular contrast to the signs of death and desolation beneath.

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