Definition of Inurning

1. Verb. (present participle of inurn) ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Inurning

1. inurn [v] - See also: inurn

Lexicographical Neighbors of Inurning

inundator
inundators
inundatory
inunderstanding
inurbane
inurbanities
inurbanity
inure
inured
inurement
inurements
inures
inuring
inurn
inurned
inurning (current term)
inurnment
inurnments
inurns
inusitate
inusitation
inust
inustion
inustions
inutile
inutilely
inutilities
inutility
inutterability
inutterable

Literary usage of Inurning

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. The Living Age by Making of America Project, Eliakim Littell, Robert S. Littell (1861)
"Because no man's temper is the better for it the next inurning. 5. Because it keeps persons up to Inte hours, when every respectable person ought to be in ..."

2. The English Poets: Selections with Critical Introductions by Thomas Humphry Ward (1917)
"In an exquisite stanza she finds a rhyme for 'morning' in 'many a mist's inurning.' In another place we have— ' When beneath the palace-lattice You ride ..."

3. Southern Literary Messenger by Carnegie-Mellon University, School of Computer Science (1844)
"... a moment's glance ; I scarce can call to mind my sire, Who passed from earth away In life's bright inurning ere the fire Of youth had ceased to sway. ..."

4. Euripides by Euripides (1912)
"... the limbs of my sire from the A burden not light, for the weight of my sorrow is burning,— [there,— All that I love in this little vial inurning. ..."

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