/ɪnˈtɚ/, /ɪnˈtɜː/, /ɪnˈtɛr/
OriginFrom Middle English enteren, borrowed from Old French enterrer, enterer, from Vulgar Latin *interrāre (“to put in earth”).
- To bury in a grave.
“The tomb was discovered on Fenghuangshan (Phoenix Hill) in Chinancheng, Chiangling county, in China’s central Hupeh province. An inscription on a bamboo tablet found in it shows that the corpse was in”
- To confine, as in a prison.
- The Inter Milan football team
Formsinters(present, singular, third-person) · interring(participle, present) · interred(participle, past) · interred(past) · enter(alternative)