repose in

repose in (someone or something)

1. To lie flat and at full length inside of something, such as a bed. She reposed in the opulent bed for the entire morning, luxuriating in its fine linens and extraordinary comfort. The baby reposed in his cot, breathing peacefully in a deep sleep.
2. To lie at full length in some state. Seeing her body reposed in death was nearly more than my broken heart could bear. The patient reposed in a trance, responding unconsciously to the hypnotist's questions.
3. To lie dead inside of something. The body reposed in its coffin looked more like a facsimile of my father than the man whose hand I held at his final hour.
4. To lay someone's or one's own body flat and at full length inside of something. In this usage, a noun or pronoun is used between "repose" and "in." The mortician reposed the man's body in the casket in preparation for the funeral. He reposed himself in the bed, his limbs heavy with exhaustion.
5. To exist or be placed within some person, group, thing, action, or concept. In such a place as this, where corruption is rife at all levels of authority, trust reposes solely in the family and in one's closest friends. The original documents repose in a heavily guarded vault hidden somewhere in the nation's capital.
6. To impart or place something in some person, group, thing, action, or concept. In this usage, a noun or pronoun is used between "repose" and "in." Many reposed their hopes for a better future in the new candidate, but found themselves underwhelmed once he actually took office. We found out long ago that we can no longer repose trust in the government.
7. To place or contort someone, something, or oneself into a new position. In this usage, a noun or pronoun is used between "repose" and "in." (In this instance, "repose" is a shortening of the verb "reposition.") I bought a fake plastic skeleton that I kept in the rocking chair on our front porch. Every night before bed, I'd go out and repose him in some humorous position as a joke. The photographer kept reposing me in different positions to try to get the best angle for the shot.
See also: repose
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

repose in something

 
1. to lie stretched out in something, such as a bed. I think I would like to repose in my own bed for an hour or two before I begin my journey. Tom reposed in a comfortable chair for the rest of the evening.
2. to lie stretched out in a particular state, such as death or slumber. She lay on the cot, reposed in slumber, waiting for Prince Charming to arrive. The ruler reposed in death on public view for two days.
3. [for something] to exist in something or be part of the essence of something. Much of our cultural heritage reposes in our literature. Considerable important thinking reposes in folktales and myths.
See also: repose
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs.
See also:
  • repose
  • repose in (someone or something)
  • climb into (something)
  • bed
  • made
  • in bed
  • make a bed
  • put (someone or something) to bed
  • put something to bed
  • put to bed
References in periodicals archive
On that score, Armato observed that the Legislature revised the statute of repose in the 1980s and chose not to add any exceptions to the law.
The opinion is significant because there has been no case law on the statute of repose in multi-building or unit claims, said Timothy Tobin, attorney for the respondent developer.
FORMER Workers' Party leader Sean Garland will repose in Liberty Hall today.
"It is very fitting he lies in repose in Liberty Hall, the home of Irish trade unionism and birthplace of the socialist-republican ideology of James Connolly and the Irish Citizen Army which was the bedrock of Sean's political views."
With these considerations in mind, this Article argues that latent toxic injury cases have unique characteristics that make it fundamentally unfair to apply statutes of repose in most cases.
In the works of scholars who have studied the impact of particle shape and size on angle of repose in the literature [24-30], the angle of repose was proportional to friction coefficient and was inversely proportional to particle size.
The 50% increase in sales during akshayatritiyais a significant jump, and even surpassed all our expectations.This, yet again reinforces trust that customer repose in Honda."
(1) In IndyMac, nonparty investors of a putative class filed individual claims substantially similar to the class's claims after the running of the three-year statute of repose in [section] 13 of the Securities Act ([section] 13).
But does repose in that setting undermine the class mechanism?
S9558 (CERCLA S309) to preempt state statutes of repose in addition to statutes of limitation.
Several writers have examined statutes of repose in the context of state-based product liability claims.
Despite (or because of) one's impatience to arrive at the heart of the matter - evidence of Melville's tense repose in Typee, Moby-Dick, and The Confidence-Man - and one's increasing sense that Bryant's pluralistic historicism works better in theory than in practice, it is a relief to reach his brilliant deconstructions of Poe's "Ligeia" and "The Murders in the Rue Morgue." These readings are digressive (Poe's "barbed humor" [p.
The defendants argued that the plaintiff's 93A action was in the nature of a tort, making it subject to and barred by the six-year statute of repose in G.L.c.
S9558 (CER-CLA S309) to preempt state statutes of repose in addition to statutes of limitation.
(40) A plaintiff must satisfy the time limits of both the applicable statute of limitations and the statute of repose in order to file suit.