Definitions for incarnates

incarnates in·car·nate

Spelling: [adjective in-kahr-nit, -neyt; verb in-kahr-neyt]
IPA: /adjective ɪnˈkɑr nɪt, -neɪt; verb ɪnˈkɑr neɪt/

Incarnates is a 10 letter English word. It's valid Words with friends word worth 14 points.

You can make 869 anagrams from letters in incarnates (aaceinnrst).

Definitions for incarnates

adjective

  1. embodied in flesh; given a bodily, especially a human, form:
  2. personified or typified, as a quality or idea:
  3. flesh-colored or crimson.

verb (used with object)

  1. to put into or represent in a concrete form, as an idea:
  2. to be the embodiment or type of:
  3. to embody in flesh; invest with a bodily, especially a human, form:

Origin of incarnates

1350-1400; late Middle English Late Latin incarnātus past participle of incarnāre to make into flesh, equivalent to in- in-2 + carn- flesh (see Examples for incarnates

Other spirits, called ataro, might be incarnate in almost any animal.

In that happy place of the collective imagination, Snowden is practically an avatar of our secular devil—“negativity” incarnate.

"The two young ladies are two incarnate angels," I said to my countryman.

It hath gone out from me; it will incarnate itself in another, in a nobler.

He became a flame-demon, a sort of incarnate spirit of fire.

Is she not an incarnate angel who can be compared to no one but you?

Did not the revived empire spring from the races in which Prussia was incarnate?

True, God himself was now incarnate on earth—of that they had no doubt.

This is a usual interval when the incarnate God is given a time-limit.

Apart from that, the new-chum is the incarnate comedy of colonial life.

Word Value for incarnates
Scrable

0

Words with friends

14

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