English edit

Adjective edit

kitchened (comparative more kitchened, superlative most kitchened)

  1. Equipped with a kitchen.
    • 1932, Alec Waugh, That American Woman, page 20:
      He saw marriage as a settling down to the serious business of life; a settling down that was symbolized in the large stuccoed house in St John's Wood Park, with its long mahogany dining-table, its family portraits, its oak-panelled smoking-room, its leather-bound books running in long, dusty rows from floor to ceiling; its drawing-room whose heavily brocaded windows looked out on a trim garden, its thick carpets, its kitchened basement, its high, wide bedrooms, its airy nursery.
    • 1949, Ernest Henry Short, Introducing the Theatre:
      ...raised the problem of the sleeping arrangements in the bed-sitting room and kitchened flat in which such ladies live while "resting".
    • 1991, Pat LittleDog, In Search of the Holy Mother of Jobs, page 73:
      It is attached to an air conditioned, kitchened camper trailer he has rented for her for twenty dollars.
  2. Relegated to the kitchen.
    • 1967, Ira Levin, Rosemary's Baby, page 54:
      "Do you come from Australia?" Rosemary asked, when the carpet had been blotted, the tray safely kitchened and the Castevets seated in straight-backed chairs.
    • 1981, Hack Miller, Looking back with Hack, →ISBN, page 29:
      Also, having tasted the cooking of some others, I did not crave it. And this reason, more than any other, kept me kitchened.
    • 1988, E. C. Curtsinger, Towers, Crosses, page 244:
      Those kitchened Marys of the old testament better have supper ready soon, or this load of drunks is going to eat each other up.

Verb edit

kitchened

  1. simple past and past participle of kitchen

Anagrams edit