¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Mansarded
1. [adj]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Mansarded
Literary usage of Mansarded
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The New York Times Current History (1917)
"... place is mansarded in such a way that the sides are only about four feet high.
The floor of this part of the barn measures about thirty by forty feet. ..."
2. New Orleans; the Place and the People by Grace Elizabeth King (1895)
"... her father's old pointed, red-tiled roofed Spanish buildings into the present
French row, to be in harmony with the mansarded Cabildo and convent. ..."
3. The Enchanted Woods: And Other Essays on the Genius of Places by Vernon Lee (1905)
"... set those boulevards with handsome little hotels, mansarded and ceil de bœuf'd,
but now very sad in their turn among the little gardens. ..."
4. Choisy: A Novel by James P. Story (1872)
"... a man in your shoes may build his ' castles in Spain ' •where he likes, fine,
five-storied, substantial ones, marbled and mansarded and all that, eh ? ..."
5. The Void of War: Letters from Three Fronts by Reginald John Farrer (1918)
"Just along the hill there is a tall old mansarded chateau, which you can not only
tell was a chateau, but which still is, with a roof and walls still ..."
6. New Orleans: The Place and the People by Grace Elizabeth King (1895)
"... her father's old pointed, red-tiled roofed Spanish buildings into the present
French row, to be in harmony with the mansarded Cabildo and convent. ..."