inclavated
English
Etymology
From Latin inclavatus, from in- (“in”) + clavare (“to fasten with nails”), from clavus (“nail”).
Adjective
inclavated (comparative more inclavated, superlative most inclavated)
- (rare) set; fast; fixed
- 1666, John Smith, King Solomon's Portraiture of Old Age
- the grinding is far more easily and perfectly performed ; beside , these are more firmly inclavated, and infixed into the jaw bones
- 1924, James Branch Cabell, Straws And Prayer-Books
- He has written wholly to divert himself: he has for that moment been inclavated to pleasure-seeking with somewhat the ruthlessness of a Nero and all the tenacity of a debutante […]
- 1666, John Smith, King Solomon's Portraiture of Old Age
References
inclavated in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913