¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Insouls
1. insoul [v] - See also: insoul
Lexicographical Neighbors of Insouls
Literary usage of Insouls
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Rod and the Staff by Thomas Treadwell Stone (1856)
"The Love 'which God is, in the processes of its creations, insouls, if we may so
speak, and embodies itself ..."
2. The dramatic works of William Shakspeare, from the text of Johnson, Stevens by William Shakespeare (1823)
"Can you not hate me, as I know you do, Hut youmust join insouls,* to mock me too?
If you were men, as men you are in show, You would not use a ..."
3. Plutarch's Morals, tr. by several hands. Corrected and revised by W.W. Goodwin by Plutarchus (1874)
"... a lively exemplar, and an immediate familiar incentive, insouls a man with
courage, moves, yea, vehemently spurs him up to such a resolution of mind as ..."
4. Deus-semper: the norm + the germ x the conditions = the fruit by George Western Thompson (1869)
"... not in identity with the universal life which in these functionalized modes
of existence, appearing ordinately after long successions, insouls and ..."