What's the difference between
and
Enter two words to compare and contrast their definitions, origins, and synonyms to better understand how those words are related.

Immure vs Restrain - What's the difference?

immure | restrain | Related terms |

Immure is a related term of restrain.


In lang=en terms the difference between immure and restrain

is that immure is to put or bury within a wall while restrain is   to restrict or limit.

As verbs the difference between immure and restrain

is that immure is to cloister, confine, imprison: to lock up behind walls while restrain is   to control or keep in check.

As a noun immure

is (obsolete) a wall; an enclosure.

immure

English

Verb

  • To cloister, confine, imprison: to lock up behind walls.
  • * 1799 , , Elle?mere: A Novel , Volume IV, William Lane (publisher), pages 219–220:
  • The gentlemen looked at each other for a ?olution of this ?trange event, each pre?uming an order had been obtained to again immure the unfortunate Clara.
  • * 1880 , , Preface,
  • In a happy moment for the Levy-Lawson-Levis, Lady Lytton was betrayed, seized, and immured . The Editor saw his chance, and made the Metropolis ring with the outrage. Levi was saved; so also was Lady Lytton.
  • * 1914', '', in ''The Single Hound'', republished 1924, Martha Dickinson Bianchi (introduction), '' The Complete Poems of Emily Dickinson ,
  • Immured in Heaven! / What a Cell! / Let every Bondage be, / Thou sweetest of the Universe, / Like that which ravished thee!
  • * 1933 December, Albert H. Cotton, “ A Note on the Civil Remedies of Injured Consumers]”, in David F. Cavers (editor), Duke University School of Law, Law and Contemporary Problems , Volume I Number I, Duke University Press (1934), [http://heinonline.org/HOL/Page?handle=hein.journals/lcp1&id=75&terms=immured&collection=journals page 71:
  • This rule is followed in all common-law jurisdictions, although it was not adopted by the House of Lords until 1932, and then only with vigorous dissent, in a case where a mouse was immured in a ginger-beer bottle.
  • To put or bury within a wall.
  • John's body was immured Thursday in the mausoleum.
  • * 1906 , , The Book of Days , Volume 1, page 807,
  • The dreadful punishment of immuring persons, or burying them alive in the walls of convents, was undoubtedly sometimes resorted to by monastic communities.
  • (transitive, crystallography, and, geology, of a growing crystal) To trap or capture (an impurity);
  • * 1975 , , American Crystallographic Association, Soviet Physics, Crystallography , Volume 19, Issues 1-3, page 296,
  • On increasing the supercooling, the step starts completely immuring the impurity and v rises sharply.

    Synonyms

    * (imprison) cloister, confine, imprison, incarcerate * (bury) inter

    Derived terms

    * immured

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • (obsolete) A wall; an enclosure.
  • (Shakespeare)

    restrain

    English

    Verb

    (en verb)
  •   To control or keep in check.
  •   To deprive of liberty.
  •   To restrict or limit.
  • *{{quote-magazine, date=2013-05-17
  • , author=George Monbiot, authorlink=George Monbiot , title=Money just makes the rich suffer , volume=188, issue=23, page=19 , magazine=(The Guardian Weekly) citation , passage=In order to grant the rich these pleasures, the social contract is reconfigured. […]  The public realm is privatised, the regulations restraining the ultra-wealthy and the companies they control are abandoned, and Edwardian levels of inequality are almost fetishised.}}

    Synonyms

    *

    Derived terms

    * restraint

    Anagrams

    * * * * * * English transitive verbs