ceiled

Adjective

 * 1)  Having some specified type of ceiling
 * 2) * 1824,, "Proserpine at her Loom, from the Latin of Claudian" in Elegant Extracts from the most Eminent British Poets. Part XI. Translations. London: Charles S. Arnold, p. 186,
 * On brazen beams the roofs supported rise, / While amber pillars of transparent dyes / Tinge, as they prop the ivory-ceiled halls, / With rich reflected light their lofty walls.
 * 1) * 1885-9,, Praeterita, edited by Francis O'Gorman, Oxford University Press, 2012, Chapter VII, section 152,
 * For Dr Andrews' was the Londonian chapel in its perfect type, definable as accurately as a Roman basilica,— an oblong, flat-ceiled barn, lighted by windows with semi-circular heads
 * 1) * 1898,, "William the Conqueror" Part I, in The Day's Work,
 * The little windows, fifteen feet up, were darkened with wasp-nests, and lizards hunted flies between the beams of the wood-ceiled roof.