[
US
/ˈɪnˌsɛt/
]
VERB
- set or place in
NOUN
- a small picture inserted within the bounds or a larger one
- an artifact that is inserted or is to be inserted
- a piece of material used to strengthen or enlarge a garment
How To Use inset In A Sentence
- The abbreviations are explained in the inset legend to Figure 3.
- Sophie Theallet says she simplified some of her trademark labor-intensive haute-couture elements, like hand-stitched insets. From the Runways, Five Easy Pieces for Fall
- Because he wants to get his picture, as the peer convicted of trigamy, on the back page of the '_Daily Mail_,' with the fourth wife inset. If Winter Don't A B C D E F Notsomuchinson
- The latter is set behind neat new brick walls inset with panels of Norfolk flint. Times, Sunday Times
- It was only to be the edging on a shawl for her, but he spent three days and two nights on it; and then she asked him to make it over with jack-in-the-pulpit inset, because she was sure to grow tired very soon of Sweet William; then she changed her mind about jack-in-the-pulpit and decided on wintergreen berries. The Best Short Stories of 1915 And the Yearbook of the American Short Story
- He will take on villains including robotic antibodies and creepy doll monsters, inset below. The Sun
- Of exceptionally fine quality, it is pyramid-shaped and inset with beaded gold wiring in the shape of a serpent.
- He used the corset look to great effect, particularly when he paired a white crocodile bustier with a black silk chiffon petal skirt and a rose silk faille bustier with a black silk chiffon lace inset skirt.
- To the right, the drawing room is a spacious area with a raised fireplace with brass inset and white marble hearth.
- While poinsettia is the most popular, a Christmas cactus in full bloom is a great gift and easy to care for once the flowers have faded.