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inhere
[ in-heer ]
verb (used without object)
- to exist permanently and inseparably in, as a quality, attribute, or element; belong intrinsically; be inherent:
the advantages that inhere in a democratic system.
inhere
/ ɪ²Ôˈ³óɪə /
verb
- intrfoll byin to be an inseparable part (of)
Other ˜yÐÄvlog Forms
- ±è°ù±ði²Ô·³ó±ð°ù±ð verb (used without object) preinhered preinhering
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of inhere1
Example Sentences
By contrast, Aristotle believed that color inhered in objects.
Elusiveness inheres, of course, in our feelings before nature, which can seem pregnant with significance even as its actual meanings remain just out of reach.
Despite the difficulties that inhere in Holocaust memoir — we believe we know this history, and its subject matter defies language — “Mala’s Cat†is fresh, unsentimental and utterly unpredictable.
In Shakespeare’s play, the occult is an expression of what already inheres in the protagonist’s psychology.
The right to hang banners is a small thing, but the value of free speech inheres in acts of individual expression just as much as in grand statements of collective purpose.
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