<adj.all> Beethoven's manuscript looks like a bloody record of a tremendous inner battle she thinks she has no soul, no interior life, but the truth is that she has no access to it an internal sense of rightousness
innermost or essential
<adj.all> the inner logic of Cubism the internal contradictions of the theory the intimate structure of matter
confined to an exclusive group
<adj.all> privy to inner knowledge inside information privileged information
exclusive to a center; especially a center of influence
<adj.all> inner regions of the organization inner circles of government
inside or closer to the inside of the body
<adj.all> the inner ear
Inner \In"ner\ ([i^]n"n[~e]r), a. [AS. innera, a compar. fr. inne within, fr. in in. See {In}.] 1. Further in; interior; internal; not outward; as, an inner chamber.
2. Of or pertaining to the spirit or its phenomena.
This attracts the soul, Governs the inner man, the nobler part. --Milton.
3. Not obvious or easily discovered; obscure.
{Inner house} (Scot.), the first and second divisions of the court of Session at Edinburgh; also, the place of their sittings.
{Inner jib} (Naut.), a fore-and-aft sail set on a stay running from the fore-topmast head to the jib boom.
{Inner plate} (Arch.), the wall plate which lies nearest to the center of the roof, in a double-plated roof.
{Inner post} (Naut.), a piece brought on at the fore side of the main post, to support the transoms.
{Inner square} (Carp.), the angle formed by the inner edges of a carpenter's square.
It lacked energy, inner direction, strength of conviction; it gave the impression of rather tired imitation, of Vienna Phil re-production.
A white tent was set up with a separate inner sanctuary to hold the coffin, which had a Japanese screen and protective sword at its head and was surrounded by lanterns and chrysanthemum displays.
In a lantern-lit inner chamber, well away from the sight of the guests, Akihito will be assisted by two female attendants as he begins the rite.
When those groups moved out of the inner city, their places were taken by today's disadvantaged.
A proposal for tax-free "enterprise zones" to be established in some inner city areas to promote commercial growth, a program championed on Bush's nominee for Housing and Urban Development secretary, former Rep. Jack Kemp, R-N.Y.
True, details of the plot whirl past so rapidly that we cannot keep up with them, but this does not matter, for everything shows us a world onstage that rattles along at its own rate and with its own inner life.
For that he was made a furnace stoker. It happened to many." We walked through the streets and main square of the inner city, my uncle convincing me that my vague remembrance of Old World charm was not mere nostalgia.
But a new survey by the Congressional Management Foundation offers some insight with a look into the inner workings of House members' offices.
The computerized bone reconstruction is faster than microscopic analysis, yields more details and lets researchers examine inner bone structure without having to slice up the specimen, he said.
But she exists in a cocoon; she only knows how to make her own inner world real onstage.
"I feel redundant when I keep saying, `I'm overwhelmed' or `I'm excited,' but it's really something you can't explain," she said. "It's just an inner feeling that you have.
In the central Texas drowning, Knight said he got out of the truck when it stalled and went to a nearby home to get some rope and inner tubes.
A proposal for tax-free "enterprise zones" to be established in some inner city areas to promote commercial growth, a program championed by Bush's nominee for Housing and Urban Development secretary, Jack Kemp.
He was appointed by Michael Heseltine to lead his Merseyside Task Force and later spent nearly a year at the Cabinet Office pulling together the Government's inner city programmes.
Dr. Arenberg has designed a shunt to help divert inner ear fluid that contributes to a buildup of pressure in the inner ear.
Dr. Arenberg has designed a shunt to help divert inner ear fluid that contributes to a buildup of pressure in the inner ear.
'After several minutes I realised it was coming from Tony Blair's inner office,' she said. 'I thought it was odd because everybody who works in that area had gone home for the evening.
To grasp its importance we must attend to every detail of our inner experience, and we will see that each is morally charged.
HUD chief Kemp considers changes being debated internally: rental subsidies that would lead to home ownership, and creating nonprofit groups to generate federal mortgage insurance business in inner cities.
Environment Minister Roni Milo said he expected the issue to come to a vote in the decision-making, 12-member inner Cabinet later this week.
Coming to, he remembers being told to deny his way-out and inner realizations or he'll be an outcast.
The decision-making inner Cabinet is scheduled to meet Wednesday, with Peres' center-left Labor Party and Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir's right-wing Likud bloc still at odds over the U.S. plan.
He has no women in his inner circle, while Dukakis has not only campaign manager Estrich but also a number of others, including his top foreign-policy aide and his convention manager.
People are asking whether the most heavily tainted politicians can return to the inner circle of power, and whether Japanese voters tolerate too much corruption.
There is peace in such places, the outer peace of scenery, the inner peace of reflection.
We would create thousands more good inner city jobs tomorrow, if the Democratic Congress would stop blocking Jack Kemp's enterprise zones program.
Lots of the guys here attempt long-range jump shots, or "the J," whereas in more downtrodden parts of the inner city, respect is earned solely by sinking an inside basket through a thicket of arms and torsos.
If the U.S. wishes to recover its "reputation," it might begin by repairing its inner cities, public education, crumbling infrastructure and multiple social needs, at the same time resisting the temptation to follow the path of Spanish grandees.
Michael Heseltine, a former Cabinet minister tipped as a possible Thatcher heir, urged the government to spend the cash from the "richer Britain" it had created on inner cities and the environment.
Bennett and Brady had been asked by President Bush to look into ways of dealing with the proliferation of such weapons amid mounting violence among drug dealers in inner city areas.