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Definitions

ensphere

[en-sfeer] / ɛnˈsfɪər /


Example Sentences

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Unfaltering trust, complete content, The days ensphere, Each meal becomes a sacrament, And heaven is here.

From Poems with Power to Strengthen the Soul by Mudge, James

Mr. Judd was a good scholar, and the word is legitimately compounded, like ensphere and imparadise; but he did not invent it.

From The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 04, No. 25, November, 1859 by Various

And all was happiness and right, beauty and strength; And every star heard all her radiant sons With songs of love ensphere her mother-breast; And all blessed Life.

From Laura Secord, the heroine of 1812. A Drama. and Other Poems. by Curzon, Sarah Anne

Thy gloomy snares the world ensphere: Where no man calls, thou lov'st to go; But when we call, thou wilt not hear.

From Sketches and Studies in Italy and Greece, Second Series by Brown, Horatio Robert Forbes

We want men in law who shall realize that the function of the legal profession is to build up justice and ensphere it in the will of the people.

From Men in the Making by Shepherd, Ambrose

They formed as it were a little world to themselves, being completely ensphered by the fog, which here was dense as a sea of milk. 

From The Hand of Ethelberta by Hardy, Thomas

I tried to build about me such a little globe of ease as always ensphered her, and thought of all that remained good in our lives though Chris was gone.

From The Return of the Soldier by West, Rebecca

But the public would have none of it, though ensphered in faultless verso, and the poets fled back to their flames and darts, and to the primrose at the river's brim.

From Gossip in a Library by Gosse, Edmund

Blessed the heaven, in music ensphered, Blessed the world, as thy mirror endeared!

From Jeremiah A Drama in Nine Scenes by Zweig, Stefan

Your universal sceptic—if he choose to affect that character,—no man is it—is impregnable; his true emblem is the hedgehog ensphered in his prickles; that is, as long as you are observing him.

From The Eclipse of Faith Or, A Visit To A Religious Sceptic by Rogers, Henry

Michael in continuation sings of the ensphering atmosphere and the storms that rage in it, darting forth tongues of lightning, and howling in gusts over land and sea.

From The Three Devils: Luther's, Milton's, and Goethe's With Other Essays by Masson, David

Emerson's ensphering universality overspreads Carlyle like the sky above a volcanic island.

From Modern Essays by Ayres, Harry Morgan




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