[inwit-gäst], st. m., evil guest, hostile stranger: nom. sg., [2671].
[inwit-hrôf], st. m., hostile roof, hiding-place of a cunning foe: acc. sg. under inwit-hrôf, [3124].
[inwit-net], st. n., mischief-net, cunning snare: acc. sg., [2168].
[inwit-nîð], st. n., cunning hostility, hostile contest: nom. pl. inwit-nîðas (hostility through secret attack), [1859]; gen. pl. inwit-nîða, [1948].
[inwit-scear], st. m., massacre through cunning, murderous attack: acc. sg. eatolne inwit-scear, [2479].
[inwit-searo], st. n., cunning, artful intrigue: acc. sg. þurh inwit-searo, [1102]. See [searo].
[inwit-sorh], st. f., grief, remorse, mourning springing from hostile cunning: nom. sg., [1737]; acc. sg. inwid-sorge, [832].
[inwit-þanc], adj., ill-disposed, malicious: dat. sg. he onfêng hraðe inwit-þancum (he quickly grasped the cunning-in-mind [Grendel]), [749].
[irnan] (for rinnan), st. v., to run: so be-irnan, to run up to, occur: pret. sg him on môd be-arn (came into his mind), [67].
on-irnan, to open: pret. sg. duru sôna onarn, [722].