释义 |
enlink, v.|ɛnˈlɪŋk| Also 6 enlincke, -lynck, inlin(c)k. [f. en-1 + link.] trans. To fasten as with links; link together as in a chain; to join in company with; to connect closely; lit. and fig. Const. in, to, with.
1560J. Daus tr. Sleidane's Comm. 193 a, Cities of the Empire inlincked with the Protestantes. 1567Drant Horace' Epist. To Rdr. *iiij, Maruaile that I wil now any longer enlincke my selfe in things so small. 1596Spenser F.Q. v. iv. 3 That lovely payre, Enlincked fast in wedlockes loyall bond. 1599Shakes. Hen. V, iii. iii. 18 Fell feats, Enlynckt to wast and desolation. 1606G. W[oodcocke] tr. Hist. Ivstine 24 b, He fled vnto Tissaphernes..with whom..he in-linked himself in such great friendship [etc.]. 1620T. Granger Div. Logike 159 The observation of these conditions. Concludeth, and inlinketh, true, and genuine Conjugates together. Ibid. 292. 1813 Scott Trierm. iii. xxx, Maids enlinked in sister-fold. 1846De Quincey Christianity Wks. XII. 264 The one idea is enlinked with the other. 1883T. Watts in 19th Cent. Mar. 415 Coleridge was enlinked to modern life and thought. Hence enˈlinked ppl. a.; enˈlinkment (rare), a linking on.
1599Nashe Lenten Stuffe (1871) 50 The inlinked consanguinity betwixt him and Lady Lucar. 1881Athenæum 17 Sept. 370/2 The enlinkment of Condate with the camp at Kinderton near Middlewich. |