emmarble

English

Etymology

em- + marble

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ɪˈmɑː(ɹ)bəl/

Verb

emmarble (third-person singular simple present emmarbles, present participle emmarbling, simple past and past participle emmarbled)

  1. (obsolete, poetic) Alternative form of enmarble
    • 1596, Edmund Spenser, A Hymn in Honour of Love
      Thou dost emmarble the proud heart.
    • 1630, Robert Bolton, A Sermon preached at Lent Assises, Anno Domini, MDCXXX, in: Mr. Boltons Last and Learned Worke of the Foure last Things, Death, Iudgement, Hell, and Heaven. With his Assise-Sermons and Notes on Iustice Nicolls his Funerall, 4th edition, London, 1639, p. 220 :
      But all the blowes and pressures were so farre from softning their hearts, that they hardened and emmarbled them more and more.
    • 1850, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, "Crowned and Buried":
      pictured or emmarbled dreams

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