Why this word is great
INMANTLE — [Verb] To envelop or cover with a mantle; to enshroud. From the prefix in- ("in, into") + mantle ("a loose sleeveless cloak"), from Old English mæntel, mentel, from Latin mantellum ("cloak"). Unlike "envelop" (which suggests a neutral wrapping) or "enshroud" (which leans toward the funereal or ominous), "inmantle" carries the quiet dignity of a cloak’s drape. It is the slow descent of fog over a sleeping valley, the way candlelight inmantles a face in gold and shadow, or how snowfall inmantles a city, muting its edges into soft anonymity—a gesture both tender and transient, as all coverings must be.