[1930–35; obs. revulse (‹ L revulsus, or back formation from revulsion, etc.) + -ed2]This word is first recorded in the period 1930–35. Other words that entered Englishat around the same time include: boondoggle, cloverleaf, hypercorrection, logical positivism, old school tie-ed is a suffix forming the past participle of weak verbs (he had crossed the river), and of participial adjectives indicating a condition or quality resulting fromthe action of the verb (inflated balloons). Other words that use the affix -ed include: connected, frosted, limited, registered, sheltered
Examples of 'revulsed' in a sentence
revulsed
If her characters lack morality, in real life she's revulsed by unfairness.