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the peaked
adjective
Having a peak or peaks.
Exact(59)
In the peaked chamber, palely lit by two small windows, additional ladders lean against loft spaces.
Cuts were made in the peaked roof, and water was sprayed down from four tower ladders.
Based on the idea of fetish, it came with corsets, rubber and, bingo, the peaked cap.
The peaked hat worn by Beatrice Lillie in "At Home Abroad," was made by them.
The guards wear the peaked hats and gruff manners of the Soviet era.
Greenwich was upriver to the left, and just visible on the right were the peaked roofs of Tower Bridge.
Although they are altered, early photographs indicate that they had delicate little brackets under the peaked gables.
The next two shells landed on the house, bursting through the peaked, corrugated tin roof, shattering beams, blowing out windows and starting a fire.
Where are the peaked caps, the military tunics and - if this isn't too chilling a thought for so early in the day - the trombones?
When the first racers reached the Peaked Mountain summit at around the one-and-a-half-hour mark, it was a brisk 18 degrees.
Now a century later, the brick building with the peaked tin roof has hardly changed, and because of that, it is drawing attention as never before.
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