¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Inhering
1. inhere [v] - See also: inhere
Lexicographical Neighbors of Inhering
Literary usage of Inhering
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Science of Natural Theology, Or, God the Unconditioned Cause, and God by Asa Mahan (1867)
"This cause no inhering law or principle of matter. II. This cause, we remark in
the second place, is no inhering law or principle acting potentially in ..."
2. Ruling Case Law as Developed and Established by the Decisions and by William Mark McKinney, Burdett Alberto Rich (1917)
"... but probably operates only as an additional incentive to aid such lottery
scheme, the vicious element still inhering in the transaction.11 14. ..."
3. God's Timepiece for Man's Eternity: Its Purpose of Love and Mercy, Its by George Barrell Cheever, Cephas H. Kent (1888)
"L. THE NEW-CREATING LIFE AND MEANING OF DIVINE INSPIRATION AS inhering IN THE
INCARNATE PERSONALITY OF CHRIST THE SAVIOUR. The inspiration is not only ..."
4. The Encyclopædia of Evidence by Edgar Whittlesey Camp, John Finley Crowe (1906)
"F. To SHOW MATTERS NOT inhering IN VERDICT. — In some states it is said that "
affidavits of jurors may be received, for the purpose of avoiding a verdict, ..."
5. Knowing and Being by John Veitch (1889)
"That, again, is said to be external or without the mind which is a property or
quality not inhering in the mind as subject, and actually or possibly ..."
6. The New Englander by William Lathrop Kingsley (1872)
"A force inhering in matter is intelligible; a force inhering in spirit is also
intelligible; but a force inhering in nothing is utter nonsense. ..."