insense

See also: insensé

English

Etymology

From Old French ensenser (to enlighten, to bring to sense), from en-+sens (sense).

Verb

insense (third-person singular simple present insenses, present participle insensing, simple past and past participle insensed)

  1. (UK, dialect) To make to understand; to instruct.
    • 1825, Elijah Fenton, Mariamne:
      eagle eyes upon the insensed yet fearful monarch

References

Anagrams

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