inwall
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Noun
[edit]inwall (plural inwalls)
- The refractory lining of the stack of a blast furnace; or the interior walls or lining of a shaft furnace.
Verb
[edit]inwall (third-person singular simple present inwalls, present participle inwalling, simple past and past participle inwalled)
- (transitive) To shut in or enclose with walls.
- 1596 (date written; published 1633), Edmund Spenser, A Vewe of the Present State of Irelande […], Dublin: […] Societie of Stationers, […], →OCLC; republished as A View of the State of Ireland […] (Ancient Irish Histories), Dublin: […] Society of Stationers, […] Hibernia Press, […] [b]y John Morrison, 1809, →OCLC:
- in short space would be so augmented , as they would be able with little to inwall themselves strongly
- a. 1599 (date written), Mary Sidney, “Psalm CXLII. Voce mea ad Dominum.”, in The Psalmes of David […], London: From the Chiswick Press by C[harles] Whittingham, for Robert Triphook, […], published 1823, →OCLC, page 272:
- O change my state, unthrall my soule enthralled: / Of my escape then will I tell the story, / And with a crown enwalled / Of godly men, will glory in thy glory.
Alternative forms
[edit]Further reading
[edit]- United States Bureau of Mines, Dictionary of Mining, Mineral, and Related Terms (1996).