imbuo

Etymology
Back-formation from the past participle, itself from , from , an instrumental-based participial derivative of.

Verb

 * 1) to wet, moisten, dip
 * 2) to fill, tinge, stain, taint, infect, imbue
 * 3) *  4th C., Nonius Marcellus (author), W. M. Lindsay (editor), Dē compendiōsā doctrīnā (1903), page 838:
 * Inbuere cōnsuētūdō indūcere extimat, cum sit propriē maculāre vel polluere vel īnficere. Accius Armōrum Iūdiciō: 'Inter quōs saepe et multō imbūtōs sanguine'. Īdem Melanippō: 'Crēditĭs mē amīcī morte inbūtūrum manūs?'
 * To imbue is usually taken to mean specifically to stain or soil or tinge. Accius in The Trial of Weapons: 'Amongst them oft too tainted with much blood'. The same in Melanippus: 'You think I'm going to stain my hands with the blood of a friend?'
 * 1) to accustom or impress early, inspire, imbue
 * 2) to do something for the first time, set the example
 * 3) to instruct, initiate, train to a degree; familiarise
 * 1) *  4th C., Nonius Marcellus (author), W. M. Lindsay (editor), Dē compendiōsā doctrīnā (1903), page 838:
 * Inbuere cōnsuētūdō indūcere extimat, cum sit propriē maculāre vel polluere vel īnficere. Accius Armōrum Iūdiciō: 'Inter quōs saepe et multō imbūtōs sanguine'. Īdem Melanippō: 'Crēditĭs mē amīcī morte inbūtūrum manūs?'
 * To imbue is usually taken to mean specifically to stain or soil or tinge. Accius in The Trial of Weapons: 'Amongst them oft too tainted with much blood'. The same in Melanippus: 'You think I'm going to stain my hands with the blood of a friend?'
 * 1) to accustom or impress early, inspire, imbue
 * 2) to do something for the first time, set the example
 * 3) to instruct, initiate, train to a degree; familiarise
 * 1) to do something for the first time, set the example
 * 2) to instruct, initiate, train to a degree; familiarise
 * 1) to instruct, initiate, train to a degree; familiarise