1786. R. Smith, in Microcosm, No. 3. Even these [persons] would be absolutely taken ill of an everted coal-box.
1804. Abernethy, Surg. Obs., 83. And turns over the everted edges of the opening.
1836. Todd, Cycl. Anat., I. 225/1. When cut longitudinally, the inner surface of the arteries does not become everted.
1859. R. F. Burton, Centr. Afr., in Jrnl. Geog. Soc., XXIX. 53. The lips are tumid and everted.
1866. Laing & Huxley, Preh. Rem. Caithn., 130. The jugal arches of the European are hardly ever, if ever, so wide and everted as those of some Esquimaux.
1879. Grove, Dict. Mus., I. 210/2. Bell. The everted opening in which most wind instruments terminate.