ppl. a. [f. EXILE v. + -ED1.] In various senses of the verb.
c. 1375. Lay Folks Mass-bk. (MS. B.), 379. Hom þat are in ille lyue seke or prisonde pore, exilde, deserit.
c. 1430. trans. T. à Kempis Imit., 125. Þe exiled sones of Eue weilen.
c. 1500. Melusine, 112. I forbede you that ye byleue not the Counseill of none exilled and flemed fro his land.
1605. Shaks., Macb., V. viii. 66. Our exild Friends.
1632. J. Hayward, trans. Biondis Eromena, 108. The sicke woman recovered together with her strength, her before exiled beauty.
1718. Rowe, trans. Lucan, I. 505/20. To thee, behold, an Exild Band we come.
1794. Southey, Bot. Bay Eclog., I. Still wilt thou present The fields of England to my exiled eyes.
1874. Green, Short Hist., vi. 298. The exiled Greek scholars were welcomed in Italy.
absol. 1839. E. D. Clarke, Trav. Russia, vi. 24/2. Tobolski, from the number of the exiled, is become a populous city.