[f. LINE v.1 + -ED1.] In various senses of LINE v.1 Lined blades (see quot. 1833). Lined gold, gold having a backing of another metal, used for making jewellery and ornaments. Also in Comb., as red-lined, silk-lined, tin-lined, etc., q.v. under their first elements.
c. 1440. Promp. Parv., 306/1. Lynyd, as clothys, duplicatus.
1492. Bury Wills (Camden), 75. Item I be quethe to the wyff of Robert Halowe my best lyned gowne and my cloke.
1502. Privy Purse Exp. Eliz. of York (1830), 68. Alle the Quenes lyned gownys.
1530. Palsgr., 239/2. Lyned gowne, robe doublee.
1602. 2nd Pt. Return fr. Parnass., II. vi. 968. A pair of lined slippers.
1607. Shaks., Timon, IV. i. 14. Plucke the lynd Crutch from thy old limping Sire.
1691. trans. Emiliannes Frauds Romish Monks (ed. 3), 396. This is that which at this day makes the Monks of Italy so full of Mony and so well Lind.
1704. J. Harris, Lex. Techn., s.v. Moat, Lined Moat, is that whose Scarp and Counterscarp are casd with a Wall of Masons Work lying in Talus or a-sloap.
1833. J. Holland, Manuf. Metal, II. 38. Lined bladesScissors of all the larger sizes are often made entirely of iron, with the exception of a slip of steel welded along the edge of the blade.
1851. Illustr. Catal. Gt. Exhib., 1246. Lined gold is merely gold lined with copper.
1881. Greener, Gun, Index 667. Lined barrels.
b. Her. (See quot. 1893.).
1688. R. Holme, Armoury, II. xvii. 395/2. The ends turned over his head cloathed of the third, Garnished (or Faced or lined) Or.
182840. Berry, Encycl. Her., I.
1847. Gloss. Her., s.v., A mantle gules, lined ermine.
1893. Cussans, Her., 129. Lined, applied to the lining of a Mantle, Chapeau, &c., when borne of a different tincture from the garment itself.
c. Lined-up (see LINE v.1 5).
1889. Work, 22 June, I. 210/3. The meaning of a lined-up top is well known among cabinet makers.