¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Galoshed
1. galosh [adj] - See also: galosh
Lexicographical Neighbors of Galoshed
Literary usage of Galoshed
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Memoir of Jane Austen by James Edward Austen-Leigh, Jane Austen (1906)
"After another pause: ' Nothing sets off a neat ankle more than a half-boot;
nankeen, galoshed with black, looks very well. Do not you like half-boots ? ..."
2. Publications by English Dialect Society (1875)
"I. To cover a boot with leather, all round above the sole. Old women's cloth
boots are very frequently galoshed. ..."
3. The Annual Register edited by Edmund Burke (1823)
"cuffs, and epaulets of false gold, a short white waistcoat, and buckskin breeches;
large old cocked hat, and newly-galoshed boots with sherry-yellow-tassels ..."
4. Appletons' Journal (1877)
"gasped the rifleman. " What women ? " " These monsters ! " pointing in the
direction of a band of water-proofed, galoshed, ..."
5. Bentley's Miscellany by Charles Dickens, William Harrison Ainsworth, Albert Smith (1837)
"They had been " soled " and " heeled" more than once ;—had they been " galoshed,"
their owner might have defied Fate ! Well has it been said that " there is ..."
6. Rambles in the Rocky Mountains: With a Visit to the Gold Fields of Colorado by Maurice O'Connor Morris (1864)
"However, I fished them out somehow, re-mounted, and though the buckskin one wears
here when travelling, galoshed over your shooting-jacket and trousers, ..."