Definitions

from The Century Dictionary.

  • Covered with icicles: as, the icicled eaves.

from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.

  • adjective Having icicles attached.

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • adjective Hung with icicles.

Etymologies

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License

icicle +‎ -ed

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Examples

  • They drank deeply inserting their icicled faces onto our dixies; nice people!

    Work Camp 10760 L 2010

  • Situation: all the front of six drawers of a chest-high freezer were all icicled-up LJ says this isn't a word; I say it is.

    sorry day mikandra 2008

  • Outside, in the dying light, he could see a vast lawn deep in snow, bordered with hedges and gardens-all lumps and mounds of white-and dotted with icicled statuary.

    Dance Of Death Preston, Douglas 2005

  • It was three stories in the air, with battlements and embrasures and narrow icicled windows, and the innumerable electric lights inside made a gorgeous transparency of the great central hall.

    Flappers and Philosophers 2003

  • Of beard that twinkled with frost, and hung to the icicled borders

    The Coming of the Princess and Other Poems Kate Seymour MacLean

  • The lights from the windows of the large buildings fell upon some of the icicled trees that stood beneath them.

    American Indian Stories 1921

  • It was three stories in the air, with battlements and embrasures and narrow icicled windows, and the innumerable electric lights inside made

    Flappers and Philosophers 1918

  • How mysterious this ice, how ghostly this snow, and all the beautiful fantastic shapes taken by both; the dream-like foliage, and feathers and furs of the snow, the Gothic diablerie of icicled eaves, all the fairy fancies of the frost, the fretted crystal shapes that hang the brook-side with rarer than Venetian glass, the strange flowers that stealthily overlay the windows, even while we watch in vain for the unseen hand!

    Vanishing Roads and Other Essays Richard Le Gallienne 1906

  • His attic under the icicled tiles was dark and narrow as the grave.

    The Divine Fire May Sinclair 1904

  • The lights from the windows of the large buildings fell upon some of the icicled trees that stood beneath them.

    The School Days of an Indian Girl 1900

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