ppl. a. [f. ENTOMB v. + -ED1.] Laid in a tomb; buried. lit. and fig.

1

1621.  G. Sandys, Ovid’s Met., XV. (1626), 305. Alemons sonne erects his citie walls: Which of th’intombed he Crotona calls.

2

1647.  Ward, Simp. Cobler (ed. 3), 59. The vast heritage of sinne your Intombed father left upon your score.

3

1746–7.  Hervey, Medit. (1818), 51. I bid adieu to this entombed warrior.

4

1866.  G. Macdonald, Ann. Q. Neighb., xii. (1878), 248. From a living Now to an entombed and consecrated Past.

5