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into (prep.)
Old English into "into, to, against, in," originally in to. It emerged in late Old English to do the work of the dative case inflections, then fading, that formerly distinguished, for instance, the notion of "in the house" from that of "into the house." Compare onto, unto. To be into (something) "be intensely involved in or devoted to" recorded by 1967 in American English youth slang.
updated on March 24, 2016
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Dictionary entries near into
intimate
intimation
intimidate
intimidation
intire
into
intolerability
intolerable
intolerance
intolerant
intonate