ink-writer 
3104 
inlumine 
ink-writer (ingk'n'tar), . In teleg., a record- inlardt (in-lard'), v. t. Same as enlard. inleaguert (in-le'ger), v. i. [< in-% + leaguer^.] 
ing instrument using int. inlarget, inlargementt. Obsolete forms of en- To encamp with an army ; lay siege. 
The form of instrument [telegraph recorder] almost large, enlargement. Scylla did inleaguer before the City of Athens. 
universally used in Europe makes the record in ink, and inlatet An obsolete form of inlet. Holland, tr. of Plutarch, p. 161. 
in lawt, a. [ME. inlagk, inlage (ML. (AL.) "in- Meakt (in'lek), . [Also foleefe; < tl + Zeafc.] 
fe*V' < AS ' *"' ln + lagu ' law ' Ct OM * fa "'-] A hole where water leaks in. 
One being ^1^ or reg tored to the protection 
hence is sometimes called the 
inky (iug'ki), a. [< ink 1 + -yl.~] Consisting of 
ink ; containing ink ; smeared or stained with 
ink; resembling ink ; black. 
'Tis not alone my inky cloak, good mother, . . . 
That can denote me truly. Shak., Hamlet, i. 2. 
Seing these North-easterne Seas are so frozen and im- 
passable, I will therefore in an inkie Sea flnde an easier 
passage for the Reader. Purehas, Pilgrimage, p. 435. 
Peter had a son, who . . . would needs exchange the 
torn and inky fustian sleeves for the blue jacket and white 
lapelle. Scott, Redgauntlet, ch. i. 
Strew'd were the streets around with milk-white reams, 
Flow'd all the Canongate with inky streams. 
Byron, English Bards and Scotch Reviewers. 
inlace (in-las'), v. t. Same as enlace. 
and benefit of the law. 
inlaw (in-la'), v. t. [< ME. inlawen, 
(> ML. (AL.) inlagare: see inlagary, inlagation), 
inlaw; < inlaw, n. Cf. outlaw."] To clear of 
outlawry or attainder; restore to the protec- 
tion and benefit of the law. 
It should be a great incongruitie to haue them to make 
lawes who themselves were not inlawed. 
Bacon, Hist. Hen. VII., p. 12. 
Swegen was inlawed that is, his outlawry was reversed. 
E. A. Freeman, Norman Conquest, II. 75. 
Graunt plancks from forrest too clowt oure battered in- 
lecks. Stanihurst, JEneid, iii. 538. 
inlet (in-let'), v. t.; pret. and pp. inlet, ppr. in- 
letting. [< ME. inleten (= D. LG. inlaten) ; < 
JB-i + left, .] If. To let in; admit. 
Upon the inlettiug of this external air, the water was 
not again impelled to the very top of the tube whence it 
began to fall, but was stopped in its ascent near an inch 
beneath the top. Doyle, Works, I. 48. 
2. To insert ; inlay. 
All round the framing of the doors tablets of solid ivory, 
chased with arabesques, are inlet . and the topmost part 
of each panel is marked off for an even richer display of 
chased tablets and crosses. 
The scandalous inlawing of such a criminal. 
J. R. Green, Short Hist. Eng., p. 98. 
inlagaryt (in-lag'a-ri), n. [< ML. (AL.) in- inlay (iu-la'), v. t.; pret. and pp. inlaid, ppr. Quoted ln Edinburgh Rev., CLXIII. 39. 
lagaria (E. as if *inlawry), < "inlagus, inlaw: inlavina. [Formerly also enlaii < iii-T- + Uaft 1 inlet (in'let), w. [< ME. inlate (= LG. inlat = 
see inlaw. Cf. utlagary."] The restitution of " ~ ' ' 
an outlaw to the protection and benefit of the 
law. Minsheu. 
inlagationt (in-la-ga'shon), n. [< ML. (AL.) 
iiilagatio(n-),<.inlagare,'inla,vr: see inlaw. Cf. 
utlagation."] Same as inlagary. Coles, 1717. 
inland (in'land), n. and a. [< il + land."] I. 
n. 1. The interior part of a country. 
Besides, her little rills, her in-lands that do feed, 
Which with their lavish streams do furnish every need. 
Drayton, Polyolbion, ii. 403. 
The rest were all 
Far to the inlantt retired, about the walls 
Of Pandsemonium, city and proud seat. 
Milton, P. L., x. 423. 
2. In feudal law, land reserved by the lord of 
the manor to be cultivated by his serfs or used 
for the manor, as distinguished from the lands 
occupied or enjoyed by the tenants. See out- 
land. 
II. a. 1. Of or pertaining to the interior, as 
distinguished from the coast ; away or retired 
from the sea or the main ocean : as, an inland 
town or lake. 
In this wide Inland sea, that bight by name 
The Idle lake, my wandring ship I row. 
Spenser, F. Q., II. vi. 10. 
Where brief sojourners, in the cool, soft air, 
Forgot their inland heats, hard toil, and year-long care. 
If. To lay in, as a hiding-place; conceal. 
From the world's common having sever'd thee, 
Inlaid thee, neither to be seen uor Bee. 
Donne, Elegy. 
Of all the inlaid Isles her sovereign Severne keeps, 
That bathe their amorous breasts within her secret deeps. 
Drayton, Polyolbion, iv. 19. 
2. To lay in ; provide ; store up. [Prov. Eng.] 
3. To lay or insert in something ; fix into or 
upon something, as for ornamentation. 
When I every day see Greek, and Roman, and Italian, 
and Chinese, and Gothic architecture embroidered and 
Maid upon one another. Walpole, Letters, II. 455. 
4. To decorate with ornamental materials laid 
in a common groundwork; ornament with in- 
serted work: as, to inlay a cabinet with ivory 
or ebony; an inlaid table. 
A broad rich Baldrick there extendeth round, 
In-laid with gold vpon an azure ground. 
Sylvester, tr. of Du Bartas's Weeks, ii., The Magnificence. 
But these are things related of Alexander and Caesar, 
and, I doubt, thence borrow'd by the Honks to inlay thir 
story. Milton, Hist. Eng., vi. 
A thousand tumbling rills inlay 
With silver veins the vale. 
G. einlass); < inlet, v. Cf. outlet.] 1. A pas- 
sage or opening by which an inclosed place 
may be entered ; place of ingress ; entrance. 
Doors and windows, inlet* of men and of light, I couple 
together. Sir H. Wotton, Elem. of Architecture. 
He commanded us rather to " put our eyes out " than to 
suffer them to become an offence to us that is, an inlet 
of sin. Jer. Taylor, Works (ed. 1835), L 215. 
An increase of our possessions is but an inlet to new 
disquietudes. Goldsmith, Good-natured Man, i. 
Though barks or plaited willows make you hive, 
A narrow inlet to their cells contrive. 
Addison, tr. of Virgil's Qeorgics, iv. 
2. A waterway leading into a sea or lake, and 
forming part of it; a strip of water running 
from a larger body into the land; a creek; a 
channel. 
On the inmost shore of one of the" lake-like inlets of the 
Hadriatic . . . lay his own Salona, now desolate, then one 
of the great cities of the Roman world. 
E. A. Freeman, Venice, p. 140. 
Shallows on a distant shore, 
In glaring sand and inlets bright. 
Tennyson, Mariana in the South. 
3. Inserted material. Simmonds. 
T. Warton, The First of April. 
. ie embroidery in which the pieces 
I close together, so as to make a sort of 
The Istrian hills, . . . and the higher mountains be- 
yond them, tell us something of the character of the inland 
scenery. E. A. Freeman, Venice, p. 88. 
In the act of July 2, 1864, | 7, that no property seized 
upon "any of the inland waters of the United States" by 
the naval forces shall be regarded as maritime prize, 
"inland " applies to all waters upon which a naval force 
could go, other than bays and harbors on the sea-coast. 
Anderson, Law Diet. 
2. Carried on within a country; domestic; not 
foreign: as, inland trade. 3. Confined to a 
country; drawn and payable in the same coun- 
try: as, an inland bill of exchange (distinguish- 
ed from a foreign bill, which is drawn in one 
country on a person living in another). 4f. 
Whittier, Terit on the"Beach. inlay^in'la or in-la'), n. [< inlay, t'.] 1. That 
id in something else, 
which is inserted or lai 
cially for the proc 
feet. 
Somewhat refined or polished; civilized: op- sale> . 
inlettert (in-let'er), v. t. [< in-2 + letter."] To 
Inlaid applique^ applique embroidery in which the pieces engrave with or in letters; inscribe, 
of cloth are fitted close together, so as to make a sort of when he nad ^ , he wa]lg of Thebes 8he offer , d (o 
re-edify them, with condition this sentence might but on 
them be inletter'd : " Alexander pulled them down, but 
, Phryne did rebuild them." Feltham, Resolves, i. 46. 
especially for the production of ornamental ef- inlicneif, adv. A Middle English form of inly. 
The sloping of the moon-lit sward SuMl'fe A ^ff '" W^ iT * I** 
Was damask-work and deep inlay mlier C h ' 6r )' " L< W|1 + lter l ^ 9 eo1 -' a 
Of braided blooms unmown, which crept part of one formation completely surrounded 
Adown to where the waters slept. by another that rests upon it : opposed to out- 
Tennyson, Arabian Nights. H er . 
tombs have been found manj precious inlightt, v. i. [ME. inligten, < AS. inlihtan, in- 
tlfe Decoration of^wood ' lyhtan, inledhtan, enlighten, < in, on, + lihtan, 
C. T. Newton, Art and'Archax)!., p. 398. light: see light 1 , v.~\ To shine. 
2. An ornamental design produced by inlay- He hatl1 i^Kyted in cure hertis. 
ing one material in another, or by inserting Wyclif, 2 Cor. iv. 6 (Oxf.). 
several materials in combination, as in a mo- inlightent (in-H'tn), v. t. [< ME. inligtnen; < 
posed to upland, the old expression for 'rustic. 
An old religious uncle of mine taught me to speak, who 
was in his youth an inland man, one that knew courtship 
to welL Shak., As you Like it, iii. 2. of execution. 
Inland ice. See ice-cap,i.- Inland navigation, reve- inlavpr (in'la-Ar) i 
nue, etc. See the nouns.-Inlaud sea, a large body of *! U W W V. m . la *h 
salt water only slightly or not at all connected with the 
ocean. The only true inland seas are the Black (with that 
of Azov), Caspian, and Aral, in Europe and Asia ; but the 
name is sometimes applied to great lakes, as Lake Superior 
in North America. The Dead Sea and the Sea of Galilee 
are small lakes, the former of salt water. The so-called 
Inland Sea of Japan (the Suwonada) is a part of the Pacific 
ocean inclosed by three of the principal islands. 
inland (in'land), adv. [< inland, a.] In or 
toward the interior of a land. 
Yet am I inland bred, 
And know some nurture. 
Shak., As you Like it, ii. 7. 
The greatest waves of population have rolled inland . ,- 
from the east Sharon Turner, Hist. Anglo-Saxons, 1. 1. inla; 
inlander (in'lan-der), n. One who lives in the 
interior of a country, or at a distance from the 
sea. 
The inlanders . 
This delicate and beautiful work belongs to the time 
' '' 
live of milke and flesh, and clad 
in-T+ lighten 1 . Cf. inlight and enlighten."] An 
obsolete form of enlighten. 
abl. of limen, threshold: see eliminate."] On the 
Bird-wood, Indian Arts, II. 43. threshold; at the outset. Technical objections to 
, , . the regularity of legal proceedings are for the most part 
1. One wuo produces in- required to be taken in Kmine, and are waived by going 
iam work for artistic decoration. on without objecting. 
The swelling bunches which are now and then found Inllstt, inlistmentt. Obsolete forms of enlist, 
on the old trees afford the inlayer pieces curiously cham- enlistment. 
Wetted. Evelyn, Sylva, xviii. 5. inlivet (in-liv')', v. t. Same as enlvse. 
2. Something laid in; something forming an What she did here, by great example, well, 
inner layer, sheathing, or coating. T' inline posteritie, her fame may tell. 
The two ends joined by overlapping with a proper in- . m Jmsm ' HeCT on ***' Anne Pawlet " 
layer of paper. J. Thomson, Hats and Felting, p. 63. UUOCkt (m-lok ), V. t. [< inA + lock 1 .] Same 
Into each cone of wool or bat an inlayer is now placed as unlock. Cotgrave. 
to prevent the Inside from matting. Encye. Brit., XI. 619. in lOCO (in lo'ko). [L. : in, in; loco, abl. of 
locuj, place: see locus."] In place; in the par- 
ticular place in question. 
n loco parentis (in lo'ko pa-ren'tis). [L.: 
in, in; loco, abl. of locus, place; parentis, gen. 
of paren(t-)s, parent.] In place of a parent. 
One who has voluntarily assumed to stand in loco parentis 
cannot ordinarily claim to be reimbursed from the child's 
3. In zool., an entoderm : correlated with mid- 
1 outlayer. 
_ _ (in-la'ing), n. [Verbal n. of inlay, v.~\ 
The art of decorating articles, as arms, furni- 
ture, objects of art, etc., with pieces of wood, 
metal, marble, ivory, tortoise-shell, etc., dis- 
property for support. 
, . 
-------- ----- , . ,, posed in patterns and let into the surface. See pro ,, erl y Ior support. 
selves m skins. Holland, tr. of Camden, p. 29. biM, damascene work (under damascene), and inlook (iii'luk), n. 
inlandisht (in-lan'diah), a. [< inland + -fefti.] marquetry. tion . 
foi^pf r at r/'T e H th 5 celeb . rated masters were, A hearty sincere inlook tends 
foi Pietra Comme 
Introspec- 
Inland; native: opposed to outlandish. 
Thou art all forinlandwh meat, and outlandish sawces 
Rede, God's Plea for Nineveh (1657). (Latham.) 
H . , 
a kind of mosaiq or inlaying of va- iloriflcatton 
nous coloured marble, and other more precious stones), 
nlani/la+ai /' / ' an az 
i-lap i-dat), t [<L. t,m, + i n l ea guet (in-leg'), . 
ttonv 'srtSE' 3 T COnVert An ^ olete fo f e 
, stony substance; petrify. 
There are some natural spring waters that will inlavi- 
date wood. Bacm, Nat. Hist., 85. 
. in no manner to self- 
Caroline Fox, Journal. 
Dominico XenettfindMi^uC'Emili/n, Diary" MaytieS! in-lot (in'lot), n. [< in 1 + lot."] In parts of 
t. [< in-2 + league 1 .'] the United States acquired from France, one of 
enleague. the lots in a village, large enough for houses, 
With a willingness inteaffuf our blood outhouses, and gardens, and so occupied. Such 
With his, for purchase of full growth in friendship. , lts generally contain about half an arpent. 
Ford, inluminet (in-lu'min), v. t. Same as enluminc. 
