inhumate, v. rare.
(ɪnˈhjuːmeɪt, ˈɪnhjuːmeɪt)
[f. L. inhumāt-, ppl. stem of inhumāre to inhume.]
trans. To inhume, bury (lit. and fig.).
1612 Woodall Surg. Mate Wks. (1653) 25* To demonstrate, what too long silence once did inhumate. 1635 Heywood Hierarch. ix. 570 Of bodies fifty, not inhumated. 1866 J. B. Rose tr. Ovid's Met. 204 Inhumated were most—but some were cast Unnoted upon pyres. 1871 Blackie Four Phases i. 151 When he sees my body either burnt or inhumated. |