ppl. a. [f. STACK v. + -ED1.]
1. Piled together.
1833. Loudon, Encycl. Archit., Gloss., Stacked, horsed.
1870. Standard, 12 Dec., 5/4. Those battalions that still remained and paced briskly to and fro by their stacked arms to warm themselves were kept for possible emergencies.
1905. Sir F. Treves, Other Side of Lantern, II. vii. (1906), 65. A place for stacked spears.
2. Piled into a stack (senses 2, 3).
1901. Westm. Gaz., 17 Dec., 2/1. Clearings with stacked-up wood.
1908. Mary Johnston, Lewis Rand, i. 10. Stretches of stacked corn appeared like tented plains, brown and silent encampments of the autumn.
3. Piled with goods.
1908. Academy, 8 Feb., 441/1. A stacked trolley obsessed the tram-lines.