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

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  1.  Furnished or ornamented with statues or statuary.

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1806.  W. Taylor, in Robberds, Mem., II. 144. The stately yew-hedge walks, and vased and statued terraces.

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1855.  Tennyson, Daisy, xvi. I stood among the silent statues, And statued pinnacles, mute as they.

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1870.  Disraeli, Lothair, lxix. An arcadian square flooded with light and resonant with the fall of statued fountains.

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  2.  Represented in a statue or in statuary.

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1839.  Bailey, Festus (1852), 243. The statued satyrs seemed to grin and jibber ’neath her eye.

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1850.  Blackie, Æschylus, I. 31. And the statued forms that look from their seats With a cold smile serenely.

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1875.  Browning, Aristoph. Apol., 338. Free to stand Pedestaled mid the Muses’ temple-throng, A statued service, laureled, lyre in hand.

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  3.  Statue-like.

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1820.  J. H. Wiffen, Aonian Hours (ed. 2), 108. The statued clouds scarce err Over the marbled skies.

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