English edit

Etymology edit

From chapeau +‎ -ed.

Adjective edit

chapeaued (not comparable)

  1. Wearing a chapeau.
    • 1853 May 24, “The Last Muster”, in Spirit of Jefferson[1], volume X, number 21, Charlestown, West Va.:
      Can time, with its corroding tooth, obliterate from the midst of that patriotic band of braves who have been annually drawn up in battle array, by asinine commandants and their plumed and chapeaued subalterns, the hallowed associations of the “Big Muster?”
    • 1999, John Barton, “Life Class (I)”, in West of Darkness: Emily Carr: A Self-Portrait, 2nd edition, Porcepic Books, →ISBN, page 13:
      Klee Wyck, Mrs. Redden would fret, shaking her old, well chapeaued head all the way down the great nave of Westminster Abbey or peering over her blind of newspapers at me when we would tea later at Abingdon Court.
    • 2016, Don Calame, chapter 14, in Dan vs. Nature, Candlewick Press, →ISBN:
      Our representatives from My Woodland Trek Adventures — the grinning, chapeaued, and bevested greeters from the website — are missing in action.