0 past simple and past participle of timetable
1 to plan when something is going to happen:
[ + to infinitive ] We are timetabled to go to the British Museum on Thursday and the Tower of London on Friday.
The lecture is timetabled for 5.00 p.m.
They were presented to the classes by their regular class music teacher, and done during the timetabled class music session.
Data were collected by observing timetabled meetings between mentors and trainees, by interviewing trainees and mentors and by studying documents relating to the course.
To guarantee such deep experiences of music within the essentially false environment of a timetabled classroom lesson is a tall order.
Also, working in small groups was not an unfamiliar practice for the participants as various lessons throughout the week were timetabled with learning support assistance to facilitate small-group work.
We mingled with a normal timetabled class, playing a background of taped dance music and at the same time learning about each of the student's particular skills and limitations.
Presently such classes are a timetabled commitment for professors in the string department at the college, but students consequently receive slightly less one-to-one tuition in order to accommodate them.
It must be in everyone's interests, including those of the objectors, to have an orderly timetabled inquiry with prior disclosure of documents.
It was because it was a one-off event, and not part of a timetabled sequence or programme leading to complete and verifiable decommissioning.