lampshaded

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

lampshade +‎ -ed

Adjective[edit]

lampshaded (not comparable)

  1. Incorporating a lampshade.
    • 1992, Mario Puzo, The fortunate pilgrim, page 49:
      He would read and write in the draped and lampshaded living room with its carpeted floor, and he would welcome her with the fond yet pitying smile and say, “Did you have a good time with your family?"
    • 2008, Jim Cartwright, Supermarket supermodel, page 128:
      There were lots of lampshaded lamps of different sizes all around him, maroon mainly, or red and fringed, and they were all full on, making him look pink.
    • 2019, AndyRay Patton, Shakey Quakey Ride, →ISBN:
      And even the destroyed lampshades had pieces unblocking off of a fallen lampshaded being, the head maybe dead, but all its limbs, its poles, its blocks, went flipping and adding to other lampshaded beings, adding to them, making them larger, bulkier and able to stretch taller.
  2. Diffused through a lampshade. (of light)
    • 1984 -, Lynn Cartier, Intimates, →ISBN, page 24:
      A middle-aged bellboy carried her luggage through the lampshaded glow of the lobby, up the elevator, and into her rooms.

Verb[edit]

lampshaded

  1. simple past and past participle of lampshade