noun.
An abbreviation of inch or inches.
noun.
A prefix of Anglo-Saxon origin, being the preposition and adverb in so used.
To get in; take or put in; house.
noun.
A prefix of Latin origin, having a negative or privative force, ‘not, -less, without.’
noun.
A suffix of Latin (or Greek) origin forming, in Latin, adjectives, and nouns thence derived, from nouns, many of which formations have come into or are imitated in modern Latin and English.
noun.
A suffix of Latin origin occurring, unfelt in English, in nouns formed as nouns in Latin, as in ravin or raven (doublet rapine), ruin, discipline, doctrine, medicine, etc. It occurs also in its Latin form -ina (which see), and is ultimately identical with -in, -ine.
A simplified spelling of inn.
noun.
An obsolete spelling of inn.
A word used to express the relation of presence, existence, situation, inclusion, action, etc., within limits, as of place, time, condition, circumstances, etc.
Of place or situation: Within the bounds or limits of; within: as, in the house; in the city; to keep a subject in mind.
Among; in the midst of.
Of time: Of a point of time, or a period taken as a point: At.