¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Inbreathed
1. inbreathe [v] - See also: inbreathe
Lexicographical Neighbors of Inbreathed
Literary usage of Inbreathed
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Theological Review: A Quarterly Journal of Religious Thought and Life by Charles Beard (1878)
"He proceeds to speak thus of the aeration of the blood : " Into the heart tho
anima was inbreathed by God to Adam, before it got into the liver, ..."
2. The Expositor edited by Samuel Cox, William Robertson Nicoll, James Moffatt (1880)
"... This sense of a divine power inbreathed has its earnest, no doubt, in the use
of the verb ep-n-vew when Homer tells how the god ..."
3. Report of the Proceedings by Church congress (1886)
"... true appreciation of the perspective in history, to understand how some of
the imprecations, say of the 69th psalm, can have been inbreathed by the same ..."
4. The Boston Review (1864)
"Hence the correct rendering of the passage is " All Scripture is given by
inspiration of God, or is inbreathed by God, and is profitable for doctrine," &c. ..."
5. Orations from Homer to William McKinley by Mayo Williamson Hazeltine (1902)
"It was not himself that he inbreathed. Yet he wished to show God's especial
nearness to man, and man's to God, the likeness of our spiritual nature to God, ..."
6. A History of English Sounds from the Earliest Period: With Full Word-lists by Henry Sweet (1888)
"Primitive man must have expressed 'drinking' by an inbreathed c<, and probably
he expressed sensual enjoyment generally, as some of us still do, ..."