[f. prec. sb.] trans. To envelop as or with a turban; also, to wind a cloth round (a cap).
1822. Milman, Belshazzar, 108. The wreaths, like mist, That turban thy dusk brow.
1851. G. W. Curtis, Nile Notes, xxv. 111. Long men and short, bald and grisly, capped and turbaned variously.
1860. Tyndall, Glac., I. xvi. 109. Clouds turbaned the head of the giant [mountain], and hid it from our view.
1876. A. Arnold, in Contemp. Rev., June, 48. They wear skull-caps of felt, turbaned with cotton.