pa. pple., upgrown, ppl. a. [UP- 6, 6 b.] Grown up.
1667. Milton, P. L., IX. 677. So standing, moving, or to highth upgrown The Tempter all impassiond thus began. Ibid. (1671), P. R., I. 140. This man born and now up-grown, henceforth I expose To Satan.
1827. G. Higgins, Celtic Druids, 99. The contests are only worthy of up-grown babies.
1848. Whewell, in Todhunter, Acc. Writ. (1876), II. 348. A great up-grown body of knowledge.
1895. K. Grahame, Golden Age, 46. To them the inhabited world is composed of children and upgrown people.