2009 — Liza Dalby, Hidden Buddhas: A Novel of Karma and Chaos, Stone Bridge Press (2009), →ISBN, page 178:
Tokuda went over everything his grandfather had taught him, including the commentary that had barnacled on to the core knowledge.
2009 — Adam Gussow, Mister Satan's Apprentice: A Blues Memoir, University of Minnesota Press (2009), →ISBN, pages 76-77:
Many of them were upperclassmen who'd been assigned to the Princeton Inn as freshmen and never escaped. By senior year they were barnacled into weirdly shaped fifth-floor garrets — majoring in astrophysics and Sanskrit, translating The Tale of Genji from medieval Japanese, bonging it up.
2009 — Sarah Laing, Dead People's Music, Vintage (2009), →ISBN, page 148:
I imagined what remained of his brain to be barnacled to the inside of his skull, leaving a clear pond in the middle.
2010 —Gail T. Fairhurst, The Power of Framing: Creating the Language of Leadership, John Wiley and Sons (2010), →ISBN, page 73:
Presiding over the courtroom, "dead center and motionless, sitting so still he might be barnacled to the back wall of the tank, hangs the black-robed judge."
Geiseric established the platform for a monarchy based on Roman, African and Christian (as well as 'barbarian') precedent, and successive ideological layers were barnacled on by the kings who followed him.
Rafik has a firm hold of her shoulders now but she's gripped a handle of my wheelchair and barnacled herself to it.
2011 — Rachel Friedman, The Good Girl's Guide to Getting Lost: A Memoir of Three Continents, Two Friends, and One Unexpected Adventure, Bantam Books (2011), →ISBN, page 48:
"That man has nothing to offer you," he concludes at a bar one night, gingerly extracting me from the nameless Irish guy I am drunkenly barnacled to.