The Collaborative International Dictionary
Embody \Em*bod"y\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Embodied; p. pr. & vb. n. Embodying.] To form into a body; to invest with a body; to collect into a body, a united mass, or a whole; to incorporate; as, to embody one's ideas in a treatise. [Written also imbody.]
Devils embodied and disembodied.
--Sir W.
Scott.
The soul, while it is embodied, can no more be divided
from sin.
--South.
Wiktionary
n. embodiment vb. (present participle of embody English)
Usage examples of "embodying".
Hence we are brought to differential equations as embodying causal laws.
In this case, if the animal is killed at the end of the fall, we have, at first sight, just the characteristics of a cycle of actions embodying desire, namely, restless movement until the ground is reached, and then quiescence.
And when he suggests that Jesus and Eckhart were embodying the integral structure, we know that he is way short of the mark (beyond the integral are the psychic, the subtle, the causal, and the ultimate).
Cerryl doubted there could be any other embodying such order, yet the red-haired smith didn't seem either much younger or older than Cerryl himself.