¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Innerving
1. innerve [v] - See also: innerve
Lexicographical Neighbors of Innerving
Literary usage of Innerving
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Quarterly Review by John Gibson Lockhart, George Walter Prothero, William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, Baron Rowland Edmund Prothero Ernle, Sir William Smith (1908)
"... summary of these borderland ideas as they affect the British Imperialist
movement created by it in the main but also purifying and innerving it. ..."
2. The Congregational Quarterly by American Congregational Union, Joseph Sylvester Clark, American Congregational Association, Henry Martyn Dexter, Alonzo Hall Quint, Isaac Pendleton Langworthy, Christopher Cushing, Samuel Burnham (1870)
"It destroys the great motive power,—the innerving force of most lives. The best
provision to be made for children U culture, Intellectual, moral, ..."
3. A Dictionary of terms used in medicine and the collateral sciences by Richard Dennis Hoblyn (1900)
"The act of innerving, or exciting special activity in any part of the nervous
system, or organ of sense or motion. INNOCENT. The term applied to growths ..."
4. The Congregational Quarterly (1870)
"It destroys the great motive power,— the innerving force of most lives. The best
provision to be made for children is culture, intellectual, moral, ..."
5. The American Phonographic Dictionary: Exhibiting the Correct and Actual by Elias Longley (1882)
"... Inner Innermost Innerve-ed4 Innerving Innervation Innholder Inning J Inn-keeper!
Innocence Innocency Innocent-ly Innocuous Innocuously Innocuous-j -ness ..."
6. Bio-philosophy by Joel Nelson Eno (1913)
"... and that each segment of the body in the articulates and lower vertebrates
especially, furnishes its own innerving power; the bee abdomen severed will ..."