enisle

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English

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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From en- +‎ isle.

Pronunciation

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Verb

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enisle (third-person singular simple present enisles, present participle enisling, simple past and past participle enisled)

  1. (transitive) To make into an island.
    • 1930, Walter De la Mare, Desert Islands and Robinson Crusoe[1], New York: Farrar & Rinehart, page 118:
      [] long before England itself was enisled by the sea.
    • 1966, David Keir, The City of Edinburgh, Collins, page 28:
      [] park-like belts of villas enisled by lawns []
  2. (transitive, figurative, by extension) To isolate.
    • 1876, Edmond Holmes, “After Death”, in Poems[2], London: Henry S. King & Co., page 82:
      [] no reply / Comes from the vast, enisling sphere / Of spirit, limitless, divine, / So far from me, so strangely mine.
    • 1925, Robinson Jeffers, “For Una”, in The Wild God of the World: An Anthology of Robinson Jeffers[3], Stanford University Press, published 2003, p:
      To-night, dear, / Let's forget all that, that and the war, / And enisle ourselves a little beyond time, / You with this Irish whiskey, I with red wine / While the stars go over the sleepless ocean,
    • 2005, Jed Horne, Desire Street: A True Story of Death and Deliverance in New Orleans[4], New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, page 25:
      [] one in ten New Orleansians lived in the projects—some 50,000 souls more or less, almost all of them women with too many children, a gulag of women and children enisled by poverty.

Anagrams

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