ppl. a. [f. ULCER sb. or v. + -ED.]

1

  1.  = ULCERATED ppl. a. 1.

2

1575.  J. Banister, Treat. Chyrurg., 81. What meates are to be vsed as touching diet in vlcered bodies.

3

1576.  G. Baker, trans. Gesner’s Jewell of Health, 58 b. This water … cureth the Bladder ulcered.

4

1610.  Healey, St. Aug. Citie of God, I. xi. (1620), 19. One farre more sumptuous did the ministring Angell prepare for the poore vlcered begger in the sight of God.

5

1654.  R. Whitlock, Ζωοτομια, 386. Comparing his own sound Arme, with the Ulcer’d one of the Diseased.

6

1708.  Phil. Trans., XXVI. 229. A Youth of Ten Years old, had his Gums much swelled and ulcered.

7

1807.  Southey, Espriella’s Lett., II. 311. Colonel Despard … had been confined there … without fire, till his feet were ulcered with the frost.

8

1844.  H. G. Robinson, Odes of Horace, I. xxv. When that lust, and hot desire,… Shall round your ulcer’d liver reign.

9

  b.  fig. = ULCERATED ppl. a. 1 b.

10

1602.  Marston, Antonio’s Rev., V. i. Now gin the leprous cores of ulcered sins Wheale to a heade.

11

1616.  R. C., Times’ Whistle (1871), 88. Lop of these vlcerd members of our land.

12

1699.  R. L’Estrange, Erasm. Colloq. (1725), 162. Your Soul is yet fouler, than your Body, more putrid and ulcer’d, and yet more dangerously wounded.

13

1747.  Francis, trans. Horace, Epist., I. xvi. 32. For Fools alone their ulcer’d Ills conceal.

14

  † 2.  = ULCERATED ppl. a. 3. Obs.1

15

1622.  R. Banister, 113 Diseases Eyes, O 10 b. Of vlcered Cancers, those onely are cut and seared, which are in the vpper most part of the body.

16