Rating | Solver | Clue |
---|---|---|
INCLUDE | Incorporate | |
INCORPSE | To incorporate. | |
CORPORATE | To incorporate. | |
INCORPORATED | Of Incorporate | |
INCORPORATING | Of Incorporate | |
REINCORPORATE | To incorporate again. | |
LESSEE | Troubles seem to incorporate tenant | |
ACCORPORATE | To unite; to attach; to incorporate. | |
STOWAWAYS | Stores incorporate a route for illegal passengers | |
ENVOLUME | To form into, or incorporate with, a volume. | |
CONCORPORATE | To unite in one mass or body; to incorporate. | |
INCORPORATE | Not incorporated; not existing as a corporation; as, an incorporate banking association. | |
ENGRAIN | To incorporate with the grain or texture of anything; to infuse deeply. See Ingrain. | |
INCORPORATIVE | Incorporating or tending to incorporate; as, the incorporative languages (as of the Basques, North American Indians, etc. ) which run a whole phrase into one word. | |
ASSIMILATE | To appropriate and transform or incorporate into the substance of the assimilating body; to absorb or appropriate, as nourishment; as, food is assimilated and converted into organic tissue. | |
ENFRANCHISE | To endow with a franchise; to incorporate into a body politic and thus to invest with civil and political privileges; to admit to the privileges of a freeman. | |
EMBODY | To form into a body; to invest with a body; to collect into a body, a united mass, or a whole; to incorporate; as, to embody one's ideas in a treatise. |