释义 |
paned, ppl. a.|peɪnd| [f. pane v.2 (n.1) + -ed.] 1. Made of strips of different coloured cloth joined together, or of cloth cut into strips, between which ribs or stripes of other material or colour are inserted.
1555in Wills Doctors' Comm. (Camden) 43 Item, a paned blue hanging for the same use. 1583in North N. & Q. I. 77 A payr of blew paynd hosse, drawin furthe wt Dewrance. 1607Beaum & Fl. Woman-Hater i. ii, All the swarming generation Of long stocks, short pain'd hose, and huge stuff'd doublets. a1658Ford, etc. Witch Edmonton iv. i, Oh! my ribs are made of a payn'd hose, and they break. 1822Scott Nigel ii, His paned hose were of black velvet, lined with purple silk, which garniture appeared at the slashes. a1825Forby Voc. E. Anglia s.v. Pane, Paned curtains are made of long and narrow stripes of different patterns or colours sewed together. [1827W. Gifford Ford Introd. 177 Paned hose..were a kind of trunk breeches, formed of stripes of various coloured cloth, occasionally intermixed with slips of silk, or velvet, stitched together.] 2. Of a window or door: Having panes of glass. (Chiefly with qualification.)
1756M. Calderwood Jrnl. v. (1884) 127 The windows are all of the small pained kind. 1814Sporting Mag. XLIV. 43 A fox..took a direction through a glass paned door. 1888F. Hume Mad. Midas i. ii, A quaint little porch and two numerously paned windows on each side. |