intricate
IPA: ˈɪntrʌkʌt
verb
- (intransitive) To become enmeshed or entangled.
- (transitive) To enmesh or entangle: to cause to intricate.
adjective
- Having a great deal of fine detail or complexity.
Advertisement
Examples of "intricate" in Sentences
- You are a desperate cry to God, moulded in intricate word-craftmanship.
- Carbon nanotube arrays can also be grown in intricate patterns using metal masks.
- For a moment, too, he lingers on Barry Lyndon, which reconstructs a lost world in intricate detail.
- Zero stats offered for this assertion, despite Tino explaining in intricate detail all the externalities.
- It's true that Gene Wolfe's command of prose is very good, and his far-future Earth-in-decline is worked out in intricate and suggestive detail.
- The old man thrust out his tongue; and, to Pool's amazement, he saw the surface of that sensitive organ, from root to tip, tattooed in intricate designs.
- In case you missed the details: Camping's latest Doomsday prediction stemmed from what he described as an intricate mathematical formulation taken directly from numbers in the Bible.
- However, Data General had to field a suitable machine fairly soon, because customers get married to computer companies in intricate ways, and once they've married elsewhere they're often gone for good.
Related Links
synonyms for intricateAdvertisement
Advertisement