intertwine
IPA: ɪntɝtwˈaɪn
verb
- (transitive) To twine something together.
- (intransitive) To become twined together; to become mutually involved.
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Examples of "intertwine" in Sentences
- The roots intertwine and form a single trunk at the ground level.
- Michael_Velasco Is it just me or does avatar kind of intertwine with district 9?
- We will kind of intertwine some of those truths with the kids while they are here. "
- I didn't have that much to do with her, but our stories kind of intertwine, because I'm trying to hook up this marriage.
- They point to those four, they say these are former lobbyists whose work does kind of intertwine with their roles currently.
- In a highly religious nation like the United States, we should not be surprised that religion and politics would intertwine.
- This chapter highlights congregations from three religious traditions, each of which illustrates a different way that religion and politics can intertwine.
- Our Savior Lutheran in Houston, one of the congregations we describe in Chapter 7, provides still another example of how ethnicity and Lutheranism often intertwine.
- Power say it is possible to "intertwine" programmes that may work for Maori within parts of the justice system such as specialist prison rehabilitation units and the Youth Court working in marae.
- "When we were looking at their work we were seeing connections back in history, so the time and eras started to kind of intertwine and move back and forth - that was one really interesting part of the whole experience," Hostetler said.
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