entomb

Etymology

From Old French entomber (“deposit in a tomb”). Equivalent to en- + tomb.

verb

  1. (transitive) To deposit in a tomb.
    At Cihhu (Cihu), near the town of Dasi (Daxi), 30 miles (50 km) southwest of Taipei on Provincial Highway 7, Chiang Kai-shek lies entombed above ground in a granite and marble coffin in one of his former country villas. The gravesite is “temporary,” as before his death Chiang had requested his body be returned to his native province of Zhejiang in mainland China. 2007, Phil Macdonald, Taiwan, 2nd edition (Travel), National Geographic Society, →OCLC, page 122, column 1
  2. (figurative, transitive) To confine in restrictive surroundings.
    … after the original Victorian station was demolished and then entombed in concrete in the 1960s, Birmingham New Street became a byword for the worst excesses of the much-loathed Brutalist architecture so widely used to reconstruct inner-city post-war Britain. July 29 2020, Paul Stephen, “A new collaboration centred on New Street”, in Rail, page 54

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