inburn

English

Etymology

From Middle English *inbernen, *inbrennen, from Old English *inbiernan, *inbærnan, suggested by Old English inbryne (fire, burning) and inbærnednes (burning, incense), equivalent to in- + burn. Compare Old English onbiernan (to be burning). Cognate with Dutch inbranden (to burn), German einbrennen (to burn).

Verb

inburn (third-person singular simple present inburns, present participle inburning, simple past and past participle inburned)

  1. (transitive) To burn in; burn or affect as to make a permanent or lasting impression or mark.
    • 1879, John Henry Parker, The Archaeology of Rome:
      Nicias has written upon this picture that he 'inburned' it, [...]
    • 1902, American Institute of Homeopathy, American Institute of Homeopathy, Transactions of the fifty-seventh session of the American Institute:
      The habits of their fathers and their own early years have been so deeply inburned that they have not yet come to appreciate the value and convenience of modern toilets.
  2. (intransitive) To burn within.
    • 1888, William James McClure, Poems: religious and miscellaneous:
      Of life complete — the outer rays / That show what fire of love inburns, [...]

Derived terms

Anagrams

This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.