OXFORD 9000
📚 adj • entry_id 32791

incarnate

/ɪnˈkɑːɹ.nɪt/
Meanings (ES + gloss)
encarnado
Embodied in flesh; given a bodily, especially a human, form; personified.
1751-1753, John Jortin, Remarks on Ecclesiastical History He […] represents the emperor and his wife as two devils incarnate, sent into the world for the destruction of mankind.
Here shalt thou sit incarnate.
Word forms
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📚 verb • entry_id 32792

incarnate

/ɪnˈkɑːɹ.nɪt/
Meanings (ES + gloss)
encarnar
To embody in flesh; to invest with a bodily, especially a human, form.
For one thing, we virtually decided that these morbidities and the hellish Himalayan Mi-Go were one and the same order of incarnated nightmare.
Not all of the soul can incarnate into a body; the part which is left above is the psyche.
encarnar
To put into or represent in a concrete form, as an idea.
Responding to this in confusion, perhaps you construct an Idea, a structure, a multiplicity, a system of multiple, nonlocalisable ideal connections which is then incarnated. It is…
Truly, that special world presented itself to me as the arena of my perceptual activity and therefore as the world of my first reading. The texts, the words, the letters of that co…