How To Use Inhume In A Sentence

  • It is known that over 5,000 Sarmatians from this area came to Britain after the Marcomannic wars in AD 175; but it is unlikely that the people at Brougham were Sarmatians, as the latter inhumed their dead.
  • Nothing therefore could be done but to cut loose the fastenings that yet bound them to the frame they had so vainly put their trust in; and scraping a deep hole in the sand, the remains were thus inhumed together. Ralph Rashleigh
  • His son-in-law Ali asserted that when the prophet was about to be inhumed, he was found in a situation not very common to the dead. A Philosophical Dictionary
  • Birth and death, however, collide in a remarkable way in a number of tombs in the Greek world in which a woman is found inhumed or cremated together with a fetus or neonate.
  • Desperately he thrust the raw end against his inhumed right arm and was promptly rewarded with a truly terrible stink. Drowning World
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  • The treasures are inhumed again in their respective holes: they are not ours. A Changed Man
  • So, what's the going rate if, say, a noble lady would like her major rival in the city's annual flower arrangement competition inhumed in an eco-friendly manner? D&D: trust your local assassin's guild!
  • Supply-side 'Reaganomics' has been chiseled into a sacred precept, while the unmistakable role of deregulation in precipitating our recent financial crisis has been inhumed by the conservative discourse alongside amnesty, the Brady Bill, and disarmament. Daniel Cluchey: Searching for Ronald Reagan
  • It was the living that inhumed the dead, after all.
  • They were inhumed below the floor of the cave; _inhumed_, and not lodged in catacombs.] [Footnote 34: Letter to Samuel M. Burnside, in Trans. and Coll. A Further Contribution to the Study of the Mortuary Customs of the North American Indians
  • Philip had seen him lowered into his lowly grave in the far-off, humble martyry; now he had seen his golden coffin inhumed beside the Imperial tombs. Gathering Clouds: A Tale of the Days of St. Chrysostom
  • Other men have had similar dreams; it is therefore impossible to deny that the dead may return; but it is certain, at the same time, that these deceased, whether inhumed, reduced to ashes, or buried in the abyss of the sea, have not been able to reserve their bodies; it is, therefore, the soul which we have seen. A Philosophical Dictionary

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