Inwind
[in-wahynd] /ɪnˈwaɪnd/
verb (used with object), inwound, inwinding.
1.
.
Read Also:
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n. Middle English word meaning “conscience” (early 13c.), “reason, intellect” (c.1300), from in (adv.) + wit (n.). Not related to Old English inwit, which meant “deceit.” Joyce’s use in “Ulysses” (1922), which echoes the 14c. work “Ayenbite of Inwyt,” is perhaps the best-known example of the modern use of the word as a conscious archaism. […]
- In-world
[wurld] /wɜrld/ noun 1. the earth or globe, considered as a planet. 2. (often initial capital letter) a particular division of the earth: the Western world. 3. the earth or a part of it, with its inhabitants, affairs, etc., during a particular period: the ancient world. 4. humankind; the human race; humanity: The world must […]
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- Inwrap
[in-rap] /ɪnˈræp/ verb (used with object), inwrapped, inwrapping. 1. . /ɪnˈræp/ verb -wraps, -wrapping, -wrapped 1. a less common spelling of enwrap
- Inwreathe
[in-reeth ] /ɪnˈrið/ verb (used with object), inwreathed, inwreathing. 1. .