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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Balconied

Balconied \Bal"co*nied\, a. Having balconies.

Wiktionary
balconied

a. That has a balcony attached.

WordNet
balconied

adj. having balconies or a balcony; "the balconied houses of New Orleans" [ant: unbalconied]

Usage examples of "balconied".

Farther out, widely spaced in cultivated fields, stood native houses: tall and narrow, multiply balconied, graceful of line and hue, meant less to resist weather then to accept it, yielding enough to remain whole.

Well into Old Town, the party passed between two many-balconied mansions, out onto a plateau of Royal Hill.

And the monsters in the blue above it themselves looked down upon it as if it were an incredible thing -- this ancient, steep-roofed, hanging-balconied, crumbling cluster of human nests, which seemed a thousand miles from the world.

Perhaps it was the green sunlight that flooded the hall from the skylights and balconied alcoves.

Calhoun brought the car to a stop beneath the overhang of a balconied building many stories high.

Now he went racing along empty, curving highways, among untenanted towers and between balconied walls with blank-eyed windows gazing at him everywhere.

She rode in plain sight of the balconied dockside refectory where we proposed to sup.

But once in the centre of the small place, they were back in the eighteenth century, for its square was lined with balconied houses of great age, overshadowd by the church and the mountains around them.

Instead he was limping right towards the city, towards the balconied houses from which the Spaniards fired.

There were others like it, tucked between the balconied, carefully varied faces of condos and apartment complexes, tiny properties dating from before the area's incorporation into the city.

The intersection of Desiderata and Jules Verne formed a kind of gulch, the balconied terraces of Freeside cliff dwellers rising gradually to the grassy tablelands of another casino complex.

Raymond Simones, Land Agent Extraordinaire, had his offices on the third level of the four-level Place Treholme, which was more like an indoor garden surrounded by balconied offices than a place for transacting business.

Two rows of balconied pink villas with bright red roofs of terra-cotta extended from each side of the resort’s central hub, a large circular building of heavy stone and thick glass, all the structures overlooking the water, the villas connected by a white concrete path bordered by low-cut shrubbery and lined with ground lamps.