释义 |
▪ I. inburst, n. rare.|ˈɪnbɜːst| [f. in adv. + burst n.; cf. outburst.] A bursting in, irruption.
1837Carlyle Fr. Rev. I. vii. ix, Like the infinite inburst of water; or say rather, of inflammable, self-igniting fluid. 1858Masson Milton I. 424 If there was no inburst of the essential Scottish spirit into English literature. 1872G. Macdonald Wilf. Cumb. II. xx. 291, I could see nothing for some time for the mighty inburst of a lovely light. ▪ II. inˈburst, v. rare. [f. in adv. + burst v.] intr. To burst in; to come in with suddenness and violence. So ˈinbursting vbl. n. and ppl. a.
c1540Pilgr. T. 220 in Thynne's Animadv. (1865) App. i. 83 Ther workes lay in pryson fast, till the kyng of glory in⁓brast. a1876H. Bushnell in Butler's Bible Work (1883) II. 326 The inbursting of a cloudless day on all the righteous dead. 1882Macm. Mag. XLVI. 125 Sorely pressed by the inbursting Goths in the province of Mœsia. |