WORD OF THE DAY
immure / verb / ih-MYOOR
Definition
1a: to enclose within or as if within walls
1b: imprison
2a: to build into a wall; especially
2b: to entomb in a wall
Examples
"Agnes … is a suburban lifer, a mousy, resigned little woman whose life is immured by her home, her family, and her church."
— Jonathan Richards, The Santa Fe New Mexican, 7 Sept. 2018
"In the croissants and their variations, the layers are as distinct as ribs, from slabs of cold butter immured in fold after fold of dough; the interior resembles a honeycomb of air, due to steam released during baking as the butter slowly melts."
— Ligaya Mishan, The New York Times, 13 Mar. 2018
Did You Know?
Like mural, immure comes from murus, a Latin noun that means "wall."
Immurare, a Medieval Latin verb, was formed from murus and the prefix in- (meaning "in" or "within").
Immure, which first appeared in English in the late 16th century, literally means "to wall in" or "to enclose with a wall," but it has extended meanings as well. In addition to senses meaning "to imprison" and "to entomb," the word sometimes has broader applications, essentially meaning "to shut in" or "to confine."
One might remark, for example, that a very studious acquaintance spends most of her time "immured in the library" or that a withdrawn teenager "immures himself in his bedroom every night."
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