ppl. a. [f. EVICT v. + -ED1.] a. In various senses of the vb. b. Of a holding: From which the tenant has been evicted.
1604. J. Burges, in W. Covell, Answ. (1606), 156. Farre be it from vs for any mans cause to maintaine an euicted errour.
1863. Fawcett, Pol. Econ., II. vii. 237. For the evicted tenant would only be replaced by another tenant of the same character.
1874. Green, Short Hist., vii. 445. The evicted natives withdrew sullenly to the lands which had been left them by the spoiler.
1888. Daily News, 26 Sept., 6/4. This staying of the evictors hand was due to the boycotting of evicted farms.