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incise
/ ɪnˈsaɪz /
verb
- tr to produce (lines, a design, etc) by cutting into the surface of (something) with a sharp tool
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of incise1
Example Sentences
As a result, some streams became deeply incised channels that act as drains, lowering the water table and encouraging conifers to move in where meadows once were, Pope said.
Carved from wood as a durable, 3-foot-tall, totem-like column, it was then wrapped in linen, covered with smooth plaster and incised and painted.
The Los Angeles County Medical Examiner reported his manner of death as homicide and cause as “an incised wound of the neck.”
The inverted triangles incised across the female figures’ lower abdomens resemble bikini bottoms.
Expertly mimicking a child’s earnest handiwork, the picture being incised into human flesh shows two stick-figure girls holding hands.
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