ppl. a. [f. as prec. + -ED1.]
† 1. Affected with an ulcer, blistered, ulcerated.
1576. Baker, Jewell of Health, 58 b. This water healeth the bowels exulcerated and hurt.
1642. Fuller, Holy & Prof. St., II. iv. 60. Such purulent spittle argues exulcerated lungs.
1663. Boyle, Nat. Phil., II. IV. i. 121. The exulcerated tumours of one sick of the kings-evil.
2. fig. Fretted as by an ulcer; festered, irritated, embittered, exasperated.
1640. Bp. Reynolds, Passions, xxvi. 273. Exulcerated, and seditious spirits.
1667. H. More, Div. Dial., IV. xxxvii. (1713), 394. That exulcerated Malice of those marked Servants of the Beast.
a. 1703. Burkitt, On N. T., Rom. ix. Pref. (1739), 433/2. An exulcerated Prejudice against them.