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verandaed

American  
[vuh-ran-duhd] / vəˈræn dəd /

adjective

  1. having a veranda.

    a verandaed house.


Etymology

Origin of verandaed

First recorded in 1810–20; veranda + -ed 3

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Daphne sent her carriage back to the inn and climbed the steep drive which led up to the verandaed house.

From Marriage à la mode by Ward, Humphry, Mrs.

A plain, pleasant-looking woman sat sewing out-of-doors, in front of a small verandaed cottage, perched high on a hillside which commanded a wide view of central England.

From The Coryston Family A Novel by Ward, Humphry, Mrs.

It stood two storied, verandaed and hideous, a blot upon the soil of picturesque Mexico.

From The Mucker by Burroughs, Edgar Rice

Packwaukee apparently had great pretensions once, with her battlement-fronts and verandaed inn; but that day has long passed, and a picturesque float-bridge, mossy and decayed, remains the sole point of 161 artistic interest.

From Historic Waterways?Six Hundred Miles of Canoeing Down the Rock, Fox, and Wisconsin Rivers by Thwaites, Reuben Gold

He took us, from the river-steps in front of his own big, verandaed house, down the Blue Nile in a fast steam launch.

From It Happened in Egypt by Williamson, C. N. (Charles Norris)