inurn

Etymology
From.

Verb

 * 1)  To place (the remains of a person who has died) in an urn or other container.
 * 2)  To hold or contain (the remains of a person who has died).
 * 3) * 1826,, Eulogy given on 15July, 1826, in A Selection of Eulogies, Pronounced in the Several States, in Honor of  and , Hartford: D.F. Robinson, p.21,
 * Over the insensible marble, which inurns their ashes, a nation bows prostrate in the lowly attitude of mourning,
 * 1)  To hold or contain (the remains of a person who has died).
 * 2) * 1826,, Eulogy given on 15July, 1826, in A Selection of Eulogies, Pronounced in the Several States, in Honor of  and , Hartford: D.F. Robinson, p.21,
 * Over the insensible marble, which inurns their ashes, a nation bows prostrate in the lowly attitude of mourning,
 * 1) * 1826,, Eulogy given on 15July, 1826, in A Selection of Eulogies, Pronounced in the Several States, in Honor of  and , Hartford: D.F. Robinson, p.21,
 * Over the insensible marble, which inurns their ashes, a nation bows prostrate in the lowly attitude of mourning,
 * Over the insensible marble, which inurns their ashes, a nation bows prostrate in the lowly attitude of mourning,