ppl. a. [In sense 1, f. TABULATE a. + -ED1; in 2, pa. pple. of TABULATE v.]

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  1.  Shaped with or having a flat upper surface; flat-topped: cf. TABULAR 1. Also, composed of thin parallel layers.

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1681.  Grew, Musæum, III. I. iv. 282. Many … of the best [diamonds] are pointed with six Angles … and some Tabulated, or Plain, and Square.

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1794.  Sullivan, View Nat., I. 435. The zoned or tabulated form of the onyx.

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1886.  A. W. Greely, Arct. Service, I. vi. 62. The remarkable tabulated masses of land in the neighbourhood of Cape Alexander.

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  2.  Arranged or exhibited in the form of a table, scheme, or synopsis: cf. TABULAR 2.

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1802.  (title) Copy of a Letter from Citizen Talleyrand to Citizen Fauvelet at Dublin, with a Tabulated List of Questions on the Commercial and Maritime Affairs of that Country.

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1862.  Bp. Forbes, in Ecclesiologist, XXIII. 34. We propose giving a tabulated scheme of the different calendars of the Scottish Church.

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1862.  M. Hopkins, Hawaii, 369, note. A tabulated statement issued by authority.

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