ppl. a. [f. EVICT v. + -ED1.] a. In various senses of the vb. b. Of a holding: From which the tenant has been evicted.

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1604.  J. Burges, in W. Covell, Answ. (1606), 156. Farre be it from vs for any mans cause to maintaine an euicted errour.

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1863.  Fawcett, Pol. Econ., II. vii. 237. For the evicted tenant would only be replaced by another tenant of the same character.

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1874.  Green, Short Hist., vii. 445. The evicted natives withdrew sullenly to the lands which had been left them by the spoiler.

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1888.  Daily News, 26 Sept., 6/4. This staying of the evictor’s hand was due … to the boycotting of evicted farms.

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