ppl. a. [f. EXILE v. + -ED1.] In various senses of the verb.

1

c. 1375.  Lay Folks Mass-bk. (MS. B.), 379. Hom þat are in ille lyue … seke or prisonde … pore, exilde, deserit.

2

c. 1430.  trans. T. à Kempis’ Imit., 125. Þe exiled sones of Eue weilen.

3

c. 1500.  Melusine, 112. I … forbede you that ye byleue not the Counseill of none exilled and flemed fro his land.

4

1605.  Shaks., Macb., V. viii. 66. Our exil’d Friends.

5

1632.  J. Hayward, trans. Biondi’s Eromena, 108. The sicke woman … recovered together with her strength, her before exiled beauty.

6

1718.  Rowe, trans. Lucan, I. 505/20. To thee, behold, an Exil’d Band we come.

7

1794.  Southey, Bot. Bay Eclog., I. Still wilt thou … present The fields of England to my exiled eyes.

8

1874.  Green, Short Hist., vi. 298. The exiled Greek scholars were welcomed in Italy.

9

  absol.  1839.  E. D. Clarke, Trav. Russia, vi. 24/2. Tobolski, from the number … of the exiled, is become a … populous city.

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