inhaunt
Appearance
English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Verb
[edit]inhaunt (third-person singular simple present inhaunts, present participle inhaunting, simple past and past participle inhaunted)
- (rare, transitive) To inhabit, frequent, or haunt.
- 1633, The Whole Booke of Psalmes:
- Wilt thou inhaunt thy selfe, and draw with wicked men to fit?
- 2010, Jason Murk, Mexican Song of Sunshine:
- Pinprick spiders inhaunt the nether regions — inhaunt is to inhabit in a haunting way — and vie with lurid grotto larvae, wormy creatures with flabby wings which are as veiny and pulsating as an engorged penis.
- 2013, Douglas Stockwell, The Coin, the Sword, and Open Book, page 151:
- Your dead, and ancient holy sisters, too
who lost their order's head by ordered sword,
so all would nevermore enhaunt our door.