noun.
A person in office; specifically, in politics, a member of the party in power.
noun.
A nook or corner; used chiefly in the phrase ins and outs.
noun.
Hence— All the details or intricacies of a matter: as, the ins and outs of a question.
noun.
An obsolete spelling of inn.
noun.
In chem., the symbol for indium.
noun.
An abbreviation of inch or inches.
To get in; take or put in; house.
A Latin preposition. cognate with English in.
noun.
A prefix of Anglo-Saxon origin, being the preposition and adverb in so used.
noun.
A prefix of Latin origin, being the Latin preposition in so used.
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.