increep

To creep in; to make a furtive entrance.

Verb

  1. To creep in; to make a furtive entrance.
    • 1849, Henoch Clapham, quoted in Jane Eliza Leeson, Chapters on Deacons First, order gone, and doores not being kept, / By baptisme heaps of prophane do rush. / With them, at length, a ministry incrept, / That with the...
    • It seemed a thing for weeping / To find, at slumber's wane / And morning's sly increeping, / That Now, not Then, held reign. - 1922, Thomas Hardy, In The Small Hours:

Origin

From in- + creep.

Forms

increeps increeping incrept