kitchened

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English[edit]

Adjective[edit]

kitchened (comparative more kitchened, superlative most kitchened)

  1. Equipped with a kitchen.
    • 1932, Alec Waugh, That American Woman, page 20:
      He saw marriage as a settling down to the serious business of life; a settling down that was symbolized in the large stuccoed house in St John's Wood Park, with its long mahogany dining-table, its family portraits, its oak-panelled smoking-room, its leather-bound books running in long, dusty rows from floor to ceiling; its drawing-room whose heavily brocaded windows looked out on a trim garden, its thick carpets, its kitchened basement, its high, wide bedrooms, its airy nursery.
    • 1949, Ernest Henry Short, Introducing the Theatre:
      ...raised the problem of the sleeping arrangements in the bed-sitting room and kitchened flat in which such ladies live while "resting".
    • 1991, Pat LittleDog, In Search of the Holy Mother of Jobs, page 73:
      It is attached to an air conditioned, kitchened camper trailer he has rented for her for twenty dollars.
  2. Relegated to the kitchen.
    • 1967, Ira Levin, Rosemary's Baby, page 54:
      "Do you come from Australia?" Rosemary asked, when the carpet had been blotted, the tray safely kitchened and the Castevets seated in straight-backed chairs.
    • 1981, Hack Miller, Looking back with Hack, →ISBN, page 29:
      Also, having tasted the cooking of some others, I did not crave it. And this reason, more than any other, kept me kitchened.
    • 1988, E. C. Curtsinger, Towers, Crosses, page 244:
      Those kitchened Marys of the old testament better have supper ready soon, or this load of drunks is going to eat each other up.

Verb[edit]

kitchened

  1. simple past and past participle of kitchen

Anagrams[edit]