The Collaborative International Dictionary
Inbreathe \In*breathe"\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Inbreathed; p.
pr. & vb. n. Inbreathing.]
To infuse by breathing; to inspire.
--Coleridge.
Wiktionary
vb. (context ambitransitive English) To breathe in; imbreathe.
Usage examples of "inbreathe".
For one instant the preacher paused, for the awed and listening mass of people who had been literally holding their breath, were compelled to inbreathe, and the catch of breath was heard through all the place.
His head tilted back as if sipping from a cup, as he lit and inbreathed the cigarette.
Afterwards she went for a tramp on the moors, and steadied her nerve by the rapid swing of her walk, and the deep inbreathing of that glorious air.
Too much inbreathing and too violent an effort at inhaling will not help the singer at all.
In general there were only scattered members of a Christian community, awaiting the inbreathing of some quickening spiritual influence that should bring bone to its bone and erect the whole into a living church.
What first seemed an inbreathing from without now seems increasingly our own activity.
I braced and panted with the cliff, inbreathing the rock-dust that my outbreathing had stirred up.