Definition of Inwind

1. to enwind [v -WOUND, -WINDING, -WINDS] - See also: enwind

Lexicographical Neighbors of Inwind

inwardness
inwardnesses
inwards
inwash
inwashes
inweave
inweaved
inweaves
inweaving
inwheel
inwick
inwicked
inwicking
inwicks
inwind (current term)
inwinding
inwinds
inwit
inwith
inwits
inwone
inwood
inwork
inworked
inworking
inworks
inworn
inwound
inwove

Literary usage of Inwind

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. Man and His Dwelling Place: An Essay Towards the Interpretation of Nature by James Hinton (1872)
"What things should they be which thrill our souls with rapture, penetrate our hearts with sweet or solemn thoughts, speak with such mystic language? inwind ..."

2. Celebrities at Home by Edmund Hodgson Yates, Yates, Edmund Hodgson, 1831-1894 (1878)
"He conducts for the Treasury all prosecutions arising from bankruptcy, acts for the Stock Exchange inwind- ing-up ..."

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