¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Enmeshing
1. enmesh [v] - See also: enmesh
Lexicographical Neighbors of Enmeshing
Literary usage of Enmeshing
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Surgery, Gynecology & Obstetrics by The American College of Surgeons, Franklin H. Martin Memorial Foundation (1922)
"On section, the nodule presents a smooth, glistening surface showing whorls of
stout fibrous bands, enmeshing numerous small areas which are softer and more ..."
2. The Lafayette Formation: By W. J. McGee by W. J. McGee (1892)
"... increasing in number upward and finally uniting in a network of orange-red
bands an inch or more in width, enmeshing polygons and irregular figures of ..."
3. The Photographic History of the Civil War ...: Thousands of Scenes by Francis Trevelyan Miller, Robert Sampson Lanier (1911)
"Again the tedious journey was resumed, in the hope of breaking through the
rapidly-enmeshing net and forming a junction with Johnston at Danville, ..."
4. Harper's New Monthly Magazine by Henry Mills Alden (1884)
"... are compact masses of l>lossom, and the vines clamber up above the window-sills
to the roofs, enmeshing «very stone in their tenacious threads. ..."
5. The American Journal of the Medical Sciences by Southern Society for Clinical Investigation (U.S.) (1919)
"This is due to the fact that the thick, fibrinous, corpuscle enmeshing portion
of the blood accumulates behind; while the thin, serous, dark red, ..."
6. The Bookman (1907)
"... a certain type of lawyer possesses great possibilities : "His most valuable
services were in surrounding and enmeshing the unwary delinquent debtor. ..."