But the question is to decide whether the light that inhered in them returns to its source, or is annihilated.
Danger inhered in a light shrug, with its defiance of consequences.
Awed pleasure inhered in the thought that he, so lately from Princeton, the spoiled son of a wealthy father, was a possible subject for bandit tortures!
He pointed to the well-accepted medicinal virtues which inhered in gems.
As part of this view, he felt that "simples" should be more carefully studied, because medicinal virtues inhered in single substances and that complicated combinations were unnecessary.
How much more of this sacred character inhered in the heroes who created nationwide railroad systems, vast steelmaking consolidations, monopolies of oil and coal!
Hence, it is to be remembered that we are to-day dealing with the expressions of tendencies and principles which inhered in the manifested universe as potentialities in the very beginning.
In this waif of our gutters and ward of our sidewalk artist inhered a spirit of the most punctilious and rigid honor, the gift, perhaps, of some forgotten ancestry.
To his mind a most delectable flavour of discreet scandal inhered in such collections of shabby properties from anonymous homes.
Hayne of South Carolina elaborately set forth the doctrine of nullification, claiming it inheredin each State under the Constitution.
Buchanan did not believe that self-preservation inhered in the Constitution or the Union.
While Marquette pertained to kings, feudal lords, and men of no family relationship to the victim, Mundium inhered in the father himself.
In this speech an accent of irony inhered to exasperate P.
Knowledge of his fellows' liability to lapses of hero-worship inhered in his conclusion.
But no hint of that bitter memory inhered in her greeting.
She might have been easier in her mind could she have sensed the friendly feeling that inhered in Ravell's cordial grip.
A hint of these last inhered in a remark that Bender slid in between two gulps of coffee.
Kindliness as well as curiosity inhered in his glance, for, besides the cash and educational prestige which she had brought to his cabin, Jimmy had come to like her for herself.
If Helen had looked closely she might have seen the new resolution that inhered in his smile, but she had been concerned with her own reflections.
But if the search failed, the cause inhered in other reasons than lack of diligence--in a reason that largely accounted for Glaves's reluctance to give her address.
It inheredin a dawning realization that manners, courtesy, social customs were based on consideration for others' happiness, besides being pleasant of themselves.
Though she affected brightness, she could not altogether hide the dejection, homesickness that inhered in the thought.
Speaking of Molyneux, a greater surprise inhered in the fact that she had been able to meet him without embarrassment, a condition that was due to the tact and real consideration which he displayed.
By the way, this may also remind us of the peculiar views of the alchemists of the middle ages, who believed that the property of sex inhered in the metals.
He believed that the essence of truth inhered in those differences which kept men apart, and still sever them.
Whatever problems might have inhered in that question when women were personally subject to their families or their husbands are well-nigh outgrown in all civilized countries, and entirely so in the most advanced.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "inhered" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.