Enshrine \En*shrine"\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Enshrined}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Enshrining}.] To inclose in a shrine or chest; hence, to preserve or cherish as something sacred; as, to enshrine something in memory.
We will enshrine it as holy relic. --Massinger.
Gantt, whose supporters hoped to enshrine him as the first black elected to the Senate from the South since Reconstruction, ran as an unabashed liberal and attacked what he called Helms' lying and distortion.
The Most Rev. Joseph F. Maguire, urged the bereaved to abandon thoughts of revenge and enshrine Fredette in their memories.
It is about to enshrine its 'values' in its official company memorandum of association. Yet the company's critics have a broader concern.
When Binney & Smith held a special ceremony to enshrine the eight old colors in the Crayola Hall of Fame, Mr. Pagani staged the protest march with the coffin and the skeleton.
It was supposed to enshrine the principle of nationalism and another fashionable intellectual concept, "self-determination," by which was understood the adjustment of frontiers by plebiscite according to ethnic preference.
He died in 1985, but his name remains sacred for Albania's leaders, who last year opened a costly, grandiose museum in Tirana that is intended to enshrine his every deed and word in the national memory.
It is truly startling that he should acknowledge, at long last, that the Constitution states a core value, which the framers intended to enshrine and protect.
The new Red Book will enshrine a new basis of valuation - estimated realisation price - to complement open market valuation. The concept of estimated realisation price has its roots in banking.
When the buck followed, Mr. Kontras made the shot that will forever enshrine his name in the sport of trophy deer hunting.