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revulsed

Revulsed is an adjective that is largely archaic or rare in contemporary English. It denotes being affected by revulsion or being repelled, or something that produces revulsion. In modern usage, the noun form revulsion and the adjective revulsive are more common, while revulsed itself appears mainly in historical or literary contexts.

In historical medical or physiological writing, revulsed and related revulsive terms described counterirritant treatments intended to

Examples of usage are typical of older texts: a sentence might describe a patient as revulsed by

Related terms include revulsion (a noun), revulsive (an adjective or noun referring to something that produces

provoke
a
local
reaction
to
draw
energy,
blood,
or
symptoms
away
from
a
diseased
area.
Such
practices—sometimes
called
revulsives—used
topical
caustics,
blisters,
or
cold
and
heat
applications
to
induce
a
revulsive
response.
Descriptions
might
refer
to
a
patient
being
revulsed
by
a
procedure
if
it
elicited
a
pronounced
revulsive
reaction.
the
sight
of
an
injury,
or
a
physician
as
applying
a
revulsed
plaster
to
provoke
a
counterirritant
effect.
In
general
modern
prose,
however,
speakers
are
more
likely
to
say
they
were
repulsed
or
that
a
treatment
caused
a
revulsion,
rather
than
to
use
revulsed.
revulsion),
and
revulsant
(a
substance
or
measure
designed
to
cause
a
revulsive
reaction).
The
word
remains
largely
of
historical
interest,
with
contemporary
usage
favoring
clearer,
more
common
expressions
for
disgust
or
counterirritant
effects.