plumbered

Hello, you have come here looking for the meaning of the word plumbered. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word plumbered, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say plumbered in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word plumbered you have here. The definition of the word plumbered will help you to be more precise and correct when speaking or writing your texts. Knowing the definition ofplumbered, as well as those of other words, enriches your vocabulary and provides you with more and better linguistic resources.

English

Adjective

plumbered (not comparable)

  1. (informal, rare) Equipped with plumbing.
    • 1929 October 30, H P Lovecraft, “To James Ferdinand Morton”, in August Derleth, Donald Wandrei, editors, Selected Letters, 1929-1931, Sauk City, Wis.: Arkham House, published 1971, →OCLC, page 49:
      Goals shift slowly—just now we have physical comfort and safety as prime illusions; but it is almost certain that life would offer more and richer gratifications to imaginatively developed men if we could have a little less of these modern idols, and a little more of that divine freedom, adventure, and vivifying sense of uncertainty and irregularity which the virile individual enjoyed in less plumbered and policed days.
    • 1933 December, Daniel O. Brewster, “Monograph Six: The Cottages of Cape Ann—Part I”, in Pencil Points: An Illustrated Journal for the Drafting Room, volume XIV, number 12, Stamford, Conn.: The Pencil Points Press, →OCLC, “The Monograph Series: Records of Early American Architecture as Source Material”, edited by Russell F. Whitehead, volume XIX, pages 537–544:
      But so many have been irretrievably spoiled by ill-advised and crudely undertaken alterations and additions! For every one photographed, at least a dozen have been passed by because of the unfeeling treatment, rather than the neglect, to which they have been forcibly subjected! Mere neglect usually but adds illusion to the element of the picturesque. But the country carpenter—even possibly the city architect of general practice—may not possess that delicate sensibility that is necessary to take over these simple little survivors of an early age, and continue their charm and beauty, in a little enlarged and perhaps more fully dormered—and, possibly, also plumbered!—version.
    • 1961 February 16, T. Lynn Davis, Realty & Auction Co., “25 Mobile Homes Sell at Public Auction”, in Eugene Patterson, editor, The Atlanta Constitution, volume XCIII, number 206, Atlanta, Ga.: Atlanta Newspapers, →OCLC, page 28, column 2:
      All used trailers have been remodeled, all with different floor plans, all completely wired and plumbered, all with electric brakes, good tires and ready to roll.
    • 1965 May 22, Robert Rienow, Leona Train Rienow, “Last Chance for the Nation’s Waterways”, in Saturday Review, volume XLVIII, New York, N.Y.: Saturday Review, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 97, column 1:
      Proded by the White House, there is now a pronounced shift in the official attitude toward water pollution. The bureaucratic torpor is dissipating. Industry is mo longer brazen about its wastes. But until our well-plumbered citizenry in general commits itself to anti-pollution appropriations and to strong individual support of clean waters, Americans are doomed to chant, along with Charles Palmer at the Legislative Correspondents’ annual dinner: / “You keep going your way, / I’ll keep going my way, / River, stay away from our door!”
    • 1993, John Bentley Mays, “What You Get Is Not Always What You See”, in Ronald Conrad, editor, The Act of Writing: Canadian Essays for Composition, revised 3rd edition, Toronto, Ont.: McGraw-Hill Ryerson, →ISBN, paragraph 15, page 119:
      Now, it may strike you as a bit strange how the codes of wildness, freeness, urgency, the primitive and such have become the basis of our visual doctrine about what’s really cottage country and what isn’t—especially since the Muskoka spectacle of endless electrified, plumbered, septic-tanked little houses quickly accessible from Toronto by paved roads is not exactly a vision of the Forest Primeval.

Derived terms

Verb

plumbered

  1. simple past and past participle of plumber