Entomb in a sentence as a verb

They usually have to entomb the whole site in a giant concrete barrier to never be opened again.

It's not easy to entomb the cores, since they have melted into the earth, and it is too radioactive for people or robots to go near.

In the article I supply plenty of supporting evidence for "scumbag", which I nevertheless entomb in a contingent clause.

In markets I've been to in parts of the Northeast and Northwest in decades since, it's been virtually nonexistent to entomb produce in plastic – bulk produce has been the norm.

Or if they were sufficiently advanced, they could entomb their bodies deep in a planet and observe the universe through VR and small undetectable probes.

Lead/bismuth coolant, passive safeties, if the reactor fails it essentially entombs itself in lead preventing fissile material leak and making it easy to cleanup.

Because the stuff stays radioactive for millennia, the safest course of action is supposed to be entomb ingit in rock like at Yucca Mountain, where it can remain inaccessible to future humans.

I don’t think it can truly use seaweed to sequester carbon unless we harvest the seaweed and entomb it underground - but it has to be somewhere the decomposition won’t leak carbon into the atmosphere.

By far, the biggest problems seem to be "people".I wonder if it follows that the best thing one could do to alleviate workplace suffering is to create an AI capable of running the economy and then entomb all people in the Matrix.

Wouldn't hurt to develop at the same time genetically modified sponges and coral to capture and entomb mercury, and start millennia long filtration while we work out how to stop dumping it into our ecosystem.> scarce minerals, or any of that stuff.

Entomb definitions

verb

place in a grave or tomb; "Stalin was buried behind the Kremlin wall on Red Square"; "The pharaohs were entombed in the pyramids"; "My grandfather was laid to rest last Sunday"

See also: bury inhume inter