ppl. a. [f. EVERT + -ED1.] Turned outwards or inside out.

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1786.  R. Smith, in Microcosm, No. 3. Even these [persons] would … be absolutely taken ill of an everted coal-box.

2

1804.  Abernethy, Surg. Obs., 83. And turns over the everted edges of the opening.

3

1836.  Todd, Cycl. Anat., I. 225/1. When cut longitudinally, the inner surface of the arteries does not become everted.

4

1859.  R. F. Burton, Centr. Afr., in Jrnl. Geog. Soc., XXIX. 53. The lips are tumid and everted.

5

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.

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1879.  Grove, Dict. Mus., I. 210/2. Bell.… The everted opening in which most wind instruments terminate.

7