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Webster 1913 Edition


Immure

Im-mure′

,
Verb.
T.
[
imp. & p. p.
Immured
;
p. pr. & vb. n.
Immuring
.]
[Pref.
im-
in +
mure
: cf. F.
emmurer
.]
1.
To wall around; to surround with walls.
[Obs.]
Sandys.
2.
To inclose whithin walls, or as within walls; hence, to shut up; to imprison; to incarcerate.
Those tender babes
Whom envy hath
immured
within your walls.
Shakespeare
This huge convex of fire,
Outrageous to devour,
immures
us round.
Milton.

Im-mure′

,
Noun.
A wall; an inclosure.
[Obs.]
Shak.

Webster 1828 Edition


Immure

IMMU'RE

,
Verb.
T.
[L. in and murus, a wall.]
1.
To inclose within walls; to shut up; to confine; as, to immure nuns in cloisters.
The student immures himself voluntarily.
2.
To wall; to surround with walls.
Lysimachus immured it with a wall. [Not usual.]
3.
To imprison.

IMMU'RE

,
Noun.
A wall. [Not used.]

Definition 2024


immure

immure

English

Verb

immure (third-person singular simple present immures, present participle immuring, simple past and past participle immured)

  1. (transitive) To cloister, confine, imprison: to lock up behind walls.
    • 1799, Mary Meeke, Elleſmere: A Novel, Volume IV, William Lane (publisher), pages 219–220:
      The gentlemen looked at each other for a ſolution of this ſtrange event, each preſuming an order had been obtained to again immure the unfortunate Clara.
    • 1880, Rosina Bulwer Lytton, A Blighted Life, Preface,
      In a happy moment for the Levy-Lawson-Levis, Lady Lytton was betrayed, seized, and immured. The Editor saw his chance, and made the Metropolis ring with the outrage. Levi was saved; so also was Lady Lytton.
    • 1914, Emily Dickinson, Immured in Heaven!, in The Single Hound, republished 1924, Martha Dickinson Bianchi (introduction), The Complete Poems of Emily Dickinson,
      Immured in Heaven! / What a Cell! / Let every Bondage be, / Thou sweetest of the Universe, / Like that which ravished thee!
    • 1933 December, Albert H. Cotton, “A Note on the Civil Remedies of Injured Consumers”, in David F. Cavers (editor), Duke University School of Law, Law and Contemporary Problems, Volume I Number I, Duke University Press (1934), page 71:
      This rule is followed in all common-law jurisdictions, although it was not adopted by the House of Lords until 1932, and then only with vigorous dissent, in a case where a mouse was immured in a ginger-beer bottle.
  2. (transitive) To put or bury within a wall.
    John's body was immured Thursday in the mausoleum.
    • 1906, Robert Chambers, The Book of Days, Volume 1, page 807,
      The dreadful punishment of immuring persons, or burying them alive in the walls of convents, was undoubtedly sometimes resorted to by monastic communities.
  3. (transitive, crystallography and geology, of a growing crystal) To trap or capture (an impurity); chiefly in the participial adjective immured and gerund or gerundial noun immuring.
    • 1975, American Institute of Physics, American Crystallographic Association, Soviet Physics, Crystallography, Volume 19, Issues 1-3, page 296,
      On increasing the supercooling, the step starts completely immuring the impurity and rises sharply.

Synonyms

Derived terms

Related terms

Translations

Noun

immure (plural immures)

  1. (obsolete) A wall; an enclosure.
    (Can we find and add a quotation of Shakespeare to this entry?)