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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
veined
adjective
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ blue-veined cheese
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ It comes in white, cream and a slightly veined beige.
▪ It is also necessary specifically to select veined material for study, hitherto not a regular practise in traditional carbonate petrography.
▪ It reminded him of a veined glass marble he had once owned as a boy.
▪ January haze, With a veined yolk of sun.
▪ Lady's Smock: These flowers are made up of four pink or lilac veined petals and grow in small clusters.
▪ She has also a teething baby, pinched and veined and smelling of milk.
▪ Sometimes, where a richer effect was required, a veneer of thin slabs of veined gypsum was added.
▪ The veined and variegated roots yielded beautiful veneers much prized for ornamental work.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Veined

Vein \Vein\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Veined; p. pr. & vb. n. Veining.] To form or mark with veins; to fill or cover with veins.
--Tennyson.

Veined

Veined \Veined\, a.

  1. Full of veins; streaked; variegated; as, veined marble. ``Veined follies.''
    --Ford.

  2. (Bot.) Having fibrovascular threads extending throughout the lamina; as, a veined leaf.

Wiktionary
veined

a. Having veins or veinlike markings

WordNet
veined

adj. having or showing markings that resemble veins [syn: venose, veinlike]

Usage examples of "veined".

The atrabilious face, the bitter, thin lips, and grey eyes veined with yellow, reminded him indefinably of a wild beast.

The original is composed of finely veined azurite or carbonate of copper, which, although specked with harder serpentinous nodules, is almost entirely blue.

The more advanced leaves are seen to be seven-cut, each lobe divided and sub-divided by cuts less deep, the whole leaf being richly toothed and veined.

Their helical sheets were veined in green and orange, concealing pockets and crevices packed with creatures who clicked and chattered and whistled, calling from the coiling complexity of the parent tree.

There was a rustle of veined wings, and Shikari settled to a tighter mass.

There are the pink and red Syenites, porphyritic granite, yellow granite, grey granite, both black granite and white, and granites veined with black and veined with white.

To her left, in the triangle of wild, uncultivated land between the meadow and the vast, overtowering whiteness of the Wall, the ground grew soft and marshy, veined with streams and pocked with tiny pools.

To the south, beyond a creek whose further bank was a raw edge of gleaming mud hummocks tufted with dark spriggy heaths and veined with waterways that shone white under the cold sky, there stretched a great quiet plain.

In the inflamed distance, far to the northwest, an isolated storm raged over the Flats: It was a mass of purple clouds, veined with lightning, trawling curtains of rain.

The same veined and bulbous plants, the same eternal underwind, the same laughter from bloodthirsty trioptic throats.

See how these wings are veined, and do you not remember how you admired the silvery wings of the corydalus when we spread them out?

Her hands were of finely veined alabaster with tapering fingers and as white as lemonjuice and queen of ointments could make them though it was not true that she used to wear kid gloves in bed or take a milk footbath either.

He inspected marbles from every corner of the world limestones, siltstones, crystalline and veined.

Where they had been greeted on their first venturing into this country by the plains of cracked yellow clay, and then passed into the place of red earth and veined foliage, now the ground showed wavelike stretches of a gray-blue coarse sand.

The gourds grew throughout the little field, protected by clumps of grass and swaddled in leaves veined with red.