[f. prec. sb.] trans. To envelop as or with a turban; also, to wind a cloth round (a cap).

1

1822.  Milman, Belshazzar, 108. The wreaths, like mist, That turban thy dusk brow.

2

1851.  G. W. Curtis, Nile Notes, xxv. 111. Long men and short, bald and grisly, capped and turbaned variously.

3

1860.  Tyndall, Glac., I. xvi. 109. Clouds turbaned the head of the giant [mountain], and hid it from our view.

4

1876.  A. Arnold, in Contemp. Rev., June, 48. They wear skull-caps of felt, turbaned with cotton.

5