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Definition of Incased
1. Adjective. Covered or protected with or as if with a case. "Products encased in leatherette"
Definition of Incased
1. Verb. (past of incase) ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Incased
1. incase [v] - See also: incase
Lexicographical Neighbors of Incased
Literary usage of Incased
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Electricity in Every-day Life by Edwin James Houston (1905)
"A lead-incased, paper-insulated telephone cable, such as is employed generally by
... Lead-incased Paper Telephone Cable. Note the fact that the separately ..."
2. Strength of Materials by Harvey Ellison Murdock (1911)
"STEEL COLUMNS incased IN CONCRETE. Frequently very heavy loads must be carried
by columns. To do this, steel columns incased in concrete are often used. ..."
3. The Photographic Amateur: A Series of Lessons in Familiar Styleby John Traill Taylor by John Traill Taylor (1883)
"Each incased in a Canvas Bag, with Handle. ("These are the finest View Cameras
ever constructed," so says every photographer who has examined any of them, ..."
4. Gould and Pyle's Cyclopedia of Practical Medicine and Surgery: With ...by George Milbry Gould, Walter Lytle Pyle, Richard John Ernst Scott by George Milbry Gould, Walter Lytle Pyle, Richard John Ernst Scott (1912)
"Later, when the acute symptoms have subsided the back may be incased in some kind
of splint, and the patient allowed very gradually to begin to ..."
5. The Anatomy of the Automobile by Andrew Lee Dyke (1908)
"The far. is driven direct by means of a short shaft and two pairs of bevel gears;
all gear, are incased. ..."
6. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London by Royal Society (Great Britain) (1879)
"At the end of this time, five grain-measures of the syrup to which zymase from
the incased tubes had been added completely reduced an equal quantity of a ..."
7. The New International Encyclopædia edited by Daniel Coit Gilman, Harry Thurston Peck, Frank Moore Colby (1903)
"The leads are usually incased in the wood before it is shaped into a pencil.
Little slabs of cedar, two, four, or six pencils wide, are passed through a ..."