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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Inarch

Inarch \In*arch"\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Inarched; p. pr. & vb. n. Inarching.] To graft by uniting, as a scion, to a stock, without separating either from its root before the union is complete; -- also called to graft by approach.
--P. Miler.

Wiktionary
inarch

vb. To graft by unite, as a scion, to a stock, without separating either from its root before the union is complete.

Usage examples of "inarch".

Ten days after that, a procession often thousand striking workers, including delegations from Salem, Marblehead, and other towns, men and women, inarched through Lynn, in what was the greatest demonstration of labor to take place in New England up to that time.

She picked up a dime from the change scattered on the tabletop, then inarched to the phone.

With Lila just behind him, he was inarched back to the otherwise still-deserted service stairway and down nine flights of concrete steps to eighty-nine, a residential level.

Two jokers in Wellington boots, their trousers stuck into the tops, inarched up and down in front of the bar with black combs pressed (o their top lips, the other arm out to the heavens, legs kicking higher and higher with every goose's step.

Young boys inarched in now from the Bowl, their expressions purposeful, their shoulders straight in the white tunics as they approached the main clutch.

Now the three people, inarching steadily, were treading the concrete steps of a fire stair, going up.

While inarching at dawn through a narrow defile with steep hills on one side and the lake on the other, the Romans were charged simultaneously from the front, the rear, and the left flank by torrents of Carthaginian infantrymen who had been concealed by a dense, low-lying fog.