释义 |
interblend, v.|ɪntəˈblɛnd| Pa. pple. -blended, -blent. [inter- 1 a, 1 b.] †1. trans. To interpose opaquely. Obs. rare—1.
1591Sylvester Du Bartas i. iv. 774 Sometimes thy thick Orb thow dost inter-blend Twixt Sol and us, toward the later end. 2. To blend intimately; to intermingle.
a1849J. C. Mangan Poems (1859) 432 Night is interblent with day. 1861Geikie E. Forbes viii. 208 Notices of plants, insects, minerals, and rocks, are interblended with remarks upon the peculiarities of his breakfast. 1888R. Buchanan City of Dream viii. 169 The lilies and the roses interblent. 3. intr. To blend or mingle with each other.
1856Masson Ess., De Quincey 467 Where παθησις at its utmost thrill and ecstasy interblends with the highest and most daring ποιησις. 1872E. H. Sears Fourth Gospel (1874) 100 The first and second [divisions of the Apocalypse] inter⁓blend imperceptibly with each other. Hence interˈblending ppl. a.
1892E. C. Stedman in Century Mag. Apr. 826 Inter⁓blending vibrations. 1896W. Gladden in Papers Ohio Ch. Hist. Soc. VII. 134 The natural and supernatural are not separated but interblending realms. |