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comparative more inwrought, superlative most inwrought
Having a design that has been worked or woven in. examples
(figurative) Fixed, established, ingrained. quotations examples
Or wait the rolling tide;While boldly to the skyHer ensign, wreathing high,Inwrought with volumed smoke, and sparkling flame, she cast.
1827, Lydia Sigourney, Poems, On the Loss od the Steamboat Ætna, page 96
As he had recovered his strength of body, he had recovered his self-command and the energy of his will; he had recovered the memory of all that part of his life which was closely inwrought with his emotions; and he had felt more and more constantly and painfully the uneasy sense of lost knowledge.
1863, George Eliot, Romola, Volume II, Book II, Chapter X, page 104