¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Ingrooved
1. ingroove [v] - See also: ingroove
Lexicographical Neighbors of Ingrooved
Literary usage of Ingrooved
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Nation: The Foundations of Civil Order and Political Life in the United by Elisha Mulford (1877)
"The change which comes is to be ingrooved in that which flies. The retention of
all that is good in the past is to be held as no hindrance to advance, ..."
2. England's Policy, it Traditions and Problems by Lewis Sergeant (1881)
"The institutions of America are new and easily adaptable; the institutions of
England are old, ingrooved, and scarcely to be modified without a ..."
3. England's policy, its traditions and problems by Lewis Sergeant (1881)
"The institutions of America are new and easily adaptable; the institutions of
England are old, ingrooved, and scarcely to be modified without a ..."
4. Reports of Cases Argued and Determined in the Supreme Court of Louisiana by Louisiana Supreme Court (1892)
"... the change which conies to be ingrooved into that which flies— not the isolation
of the old from the new, but wrought out of the old into the new. ..."
5. Report and Testimony of the Special Committee of the Assembly to Investigate by New York (State), Assembly, Legislature (1896)
"A. I think so; I think that the girder rail, the ordinary pattern of girder rail,
an ingrooved rail — I have forgotten the technical term, but it is a rail ..."