ppl. a. [In sense 1, f. TABULATE a. + -ED1; in 2, pa. pple. of TABULATE v.]
1. Shaped with or having a flat upper surface; flat-topped: cf. TABULAR 1. Also, composed of thin parallel layers.
1681. Grew, Musæum, III. I. iv. 282. Many of the best [diamonds] are pointed with six Angles and some Tabulated, or Plain, and Square.
1794. Sullivan, View Nat., I. 435. The zoned or tabulated form of the onyx.
1886. A. W. Greely, Arct. Service, I. vi. 62. The remarkable tabulated masses of land in the neighbourhood of Cape Alexander.
2. Arranged or exhibited in the form of a table, scheme, or synopsis: cf. TABULAR 2.
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.
1862. Bp. Forbes, in Ecclesiologist, XXIII. 34. We propose giving a tabulated scheme of the different calendars of the Scottish Church.
1862. M. Hopkins, Hawaii, 369, note. A tabulated statement issued by authority.