English edit

Etymology edit

Latin inamōrātus, past participle of inamōrō (enamour), from in- (in) + amor (love)

Pronunciation edit

Adjective edit

inamorate (comparative more inamorate, superlative most inamorate)

  1. (archaic) enamoured; in love
    • 1606, George Chapman, Monsieur D'Olive:
      His blood was framed for every shade of virtue
      To ravish into true inamorate fire

Related terms edit

References edit