implunge

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English[edit]

Alternative forms[edit]

emplunge

Etymology[edit]

From im- +‎ plunge.

Verb[edit]

implunge (third-person singular simple present implunges, present participle implunging, simple past and past participle implunged)

  1. (transitive, obsolete) To plunge (something into something else).
    • c. 1614, Daniel Dyke, Two Treatises:
      [] implunging our ſelues into the gulfe of our ſinne
    • 1639, Thomas Fuller, “The Pilgrimes Arrivall at Constantinople, Entertainment, and Departure”, in The Historie of the Holy Warre, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire: [] Thomas Buck, one of the printers to the Universitie of Cambridge [and sold by John Williams, London], →OCLC, book I, pages 22–23:
      [H]e [] by his overcarefulneſſe and cauſeleſſe ſuſpicion, deprived himſelf of this benefit, and implunged himſelf in much juſt hatred for his unjuſt dealing and treachery.

References[edit]