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.
| 1555 in Wills Doctors' Comm. (Camden) 43 Item, a paned blue hanging for the same use. 1583 in North N. & Q. I. 77 A payr of blew paynd hosse, drawin furthe w{supt} Dewrance. 1607 Beaum & Fl. Woman-Hater i. ii, All the swarming generation Of long stocks, short pain'd hose, and huge stuff'd doublets. a 1658 Ford, etc. Witch Edmonton iv. i, Oh! my ribs are made of a payn'd hose, and they break. 1822 Scott Nigel ii, His paned hose were of black velvet, lined with purple silk, which garniture appeared at the slashes. a 1825 Forby Voc. E. Anglia s.v. Pane, Paned curtains are made of long and narrow stripes of different patterns or colours sewed together. [1827 W. 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.)
| 1756 M. Calderwood Jrnl. v. (1884) 127 The windows are all of the small pained kind. 1814 Sporting Mag. XLIV. 43 A fox..took a direction through a glass paned door. 1888 F. Hume Mad. Midas i. ii, A quaint little porch and two numerously paned windows on each side. |