vistaed

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English

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Etymology

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From vista +‎ -ed.

Adjective

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vistaed (not comparable)

  1. Having or forming a vista or vistas.
    • 1912, Algernon Blackwood, "Sand" in Pan's Garden: A Volume of Nature Stories, London: Macmillan & Co., p. 234, [1]
      Through the large windows where once the Khedive held high court, the sunshine blazed upon vistaed leagues of Desert.
    • 1962, Boris Pasternak, “Golden Autumn”, in Henry Kamen, transl., In the Interlude: Poems, 1945-1960, Oxford University Press, page 72:
      The autumn is a faery hall / Thrown open to the world's inspection / Where vistaed avenues of trees / Gaze in the lakes at their reflection
    The vistaed mountains afforded many vantage points for photographing the lake.
  2. Observed in or as if in a figurative vista.
    • 1909, Francis Thompson, The Hound of Heaven
      Up vistaed hopes I sped.
    • 1917, Siegfried Sassoon, "To-day" in The Old Huntsman and Other Poems, New York: E.P. Dutton & Co., 1918, lines 10-14, [2]
      To-day I know / How sweet it is to spend these eyes, and boast / This bubble of vistaed memory and sense / Blown by my joy aloft the glittering airs / Of heavenly peace.

Verb

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vistaed

  1. simple past and past participle of vista

Anagrams

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