The Collaborative International Dictionary
Enwomb \En*womb"\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Enwombed; p. pr. & vb. n. Enwombing.]
To conceive in the womb. [Obs.]
--Spenser.To bury, as it were in a womb; to hide, as in a gulf, pit, or cavern.
--Donne.
Wiktionary
vb. (context poetic archaic English) To place or cause to be contained in the womb; to make pregnant; to conceive.
Usage examples of "enwomb".
And at the same time the huge body tried to take the invader and enwomb it.
Danlo was enwombed in water, he could now feel himself sweating, salt water bursting from his pores and merging with the dark waters all around him.
There were many doors and many novices enwombed safely within their cells, lying blindly and deafly as bodies in a prayer ship.
The slither walls grew out around the worms, enwombing them in the semirigid gel of its interior.