curtained
English
Adjective
curtained (not comparable)
- Covered or partitioned with a curtain or curtains.
- 1862, Christina Rossetti, Goblin Market, lines 184–7:
- Golden head by golden head, / Like to pigeons in one nest / Folded in each other's wings, / They lay down in their curtained bed:
- 1886, Robert Louis Stevenson, Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde:
- […] as he lay and tossed in the gross darkness of the night and the curtained room, Mr. Enfield's tale went by before his mind in a scroll of lighted pictures.
- 1954, C. S. Lewis, chapter 7, in The Horse and His Boy, Collins, published 1998:
- There was just room between the sofa and the curtained wall […]
- 1960 March, G. Freeman Allen, “Europe's most luxurious express - the "Settebello"”, in Trains Illustrated, page 141:
- The wall and door of the compartment on the corridor side are of plexiglass, fully curtained on the inside.
- (figuratively) Hidden or separated as if by a curtain.
- c. 1606 (date written), William Shakespeare, “The Tragedie of Macbeth”, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies […] (First Folio), London: […] Isaac Iaggard, and Ed[ward] Blount, published 1623, →OCLC, [Act II, scene i]:
- Now o'er the one halfworld / Nature seems dead, and wicked dreams abuse / The curtain'd sleep;
- (in compounds) Hung with a curtain or curtains of a specified type.
- 1881, Oscar Wilde, “The Garden of Eros”, in Poems, page 34:
- And in his sedgy bed the lark, for joy that Day is nigh, / Scatters the pearléd dew from off the grass, / In tremulous ecstasy to greet the sun, / Who soon in gilded panoply will pass / Forth from yon orange-curtained pavilion / Hung in the burning east […]
- 1920, Edith Wharton, chapter 6, in The Age of Innocence:
- […] the ladies had retired to their chintz-curtained bedroom […]
- 1997, Philip Pullman, chapter 1, in The Subtle Knife, Alfred A. Knopf, published 2002:
- Little grocery shops and bakeries stood between jewelers and florists and bead-curtained doors opening into private houses […]
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