释义 |
Definition of interweave in English: interweaveverbinterwove, interwoven ɪntəˈwiːvˌɪn(t)ərˈwiv 1Weave or become woven together. with object the rugs are made by tightly interweaving the strands no object the branches met and interwove above his head Example sentencesExamples - But instead of neatly-folded hosiery, out comes a congealed mass of tightly interwoven tights, socks, bras and assorted accessories.
- Huge tentacles of the fat, purple octopus were interwoven with a mix of grated carrots, peppers, cubes of boiled potato and frisee leaves.
- Asbestos tape is interwove from asbestos warp and weft yarns, suitable for lagging for boilers and pipe lines, also used as thermal insulating materials.
- Jonkers Street was already crowded with vehicles and pedestrians, which seemed to interweave without touching each other.
- The grey-trunked trees sprang up straight to a great height and then interwove their pale-grey branches in a long tunnel through which the autumn light fell faintly.
- Mark stood facing the camera, while I had my fingers interwoven and perched on his shoulder, standing slightly off to his side.
- Pain whips were about 8 feet long, 9 strands of braided rawhide with bits of metal interwoven into the tips.
- As I walked along the paths that interweave amongst the foliage I came upon something I had never seen there before.
Synonyms intertwine, entwine, interlace, interthread, splice, braid, plait twist together, weave together, twine together, wind together Nautical marry - 1.1with object Blend closely.
Wordsworth's political ideas are often interwoven with his philosophical and religious beliefs Example sentencesExamples - The fact is that the settlement of the West was closely interwoven with the evolution of arms technology in America.
- Nonetheless, the lives of fishermen are interwoven with the sea.
- It interweaves stories from the author's own childhood, revealing how her relationship with her own mother has shaped the choices she has made.
- With such a brilliant set piece, you can envisage where the comedy comes from, but as in the first play, any humour is interwoven with the power of real drama.
- The sacred and the profane, the high-minded and the obscene, the brutal and the clinically hilarious are interwoven with rare theatrical craft.
- They often interwove personal experiences into their writing, and like their heroines, these authors were constrained economically and socially due to their gender.
- The voice of the client, her narration, is interwoven with the theoretical discussion.
- The ceremony interwove, and was interwoven with, notions of masculinity, modernity, and nation-formation.
- The rejection of linear time is, for many postmodern thinkers, closely interwoven with two other crucial issues.
- Songs are interwoven with the narrative, so it's a new thing for them.
- So deeply and often invisibly is religion interwoven with tradition here, few are predicting an easy ride ahead.
- Christians, Muslims and Hindus gave prime importance to spirituality, and religion was interwoven with everyday life.
- Themes dealt with include place and identity, both personal and regional, and they are interwoven with a constant human presence in the works.
- Sexual attitudes, knowledge, and sexual experiences in earlier years are closely interwoven with sexual desire.
- Baseball illustrates how seamlessly English is interwoven with Japanese.
- Such problems are interwoven with economic, political and social history.
- This award-winning novel interweaves the life of a San Francisco filmmaker with the life of a courtesan priestess of Inanna.
- My experience is interwoven with that of others.
- The New Leipzig School is genealogically interwoven with the old one and shaped by a tradition of perfected craftsmanship.
- Closely interwoven with this belief is their intuition that in the country there lies a potent source of inspiration and imagery that they as artists should not ignore.
Synonyms interlink, link, connect, associate intermix, mix, merge, blend, fuse, interlock, knit, bind together
Rhymes achieve, believe, breve, cleave, conceive, deceive, eve, greave, grieve, heave, interleave, khedive, leave, misconceive, naive, Neve, peeve, perceive, reave, receive, reive, relieve, reprieve, retrieve, sheave, sleeve, steeve, Steve, Tananarive, Tel Aviv, thieve, underachieve, upheave, weave, we've, Yves Definition of interweave in US English: interweaveverbˌin(t)ərˈwēvˌɪn(t)ərˈwiv 1Weave or become woven together. with object the rugs are made by tightly interweaving the strands no object the branches met and interwove above his head Example sentencesExamples - As I walked along the paths that interweave amongst the foliage I came upon something I had never seen there before.
- Mark stood facing the camera, while I had my fingers interwoven and perched on his shoulder, standing slightly off to his side.
- But instead of neatly-folded hosiery, out comes a congealed mass of tightly interwoven tights, socks, bras and assorted accessories.
- The grey-trunked trees sprang up straight to a great height and then interwove their pale-grey branches in a long tunnel through which the autumn light fell faintly.
- Jonkers Street was already crowded with vehicles and pedestrians, which seemed to interweave without touching each other.
- Pain whips were about 8 feet long, 9 strands of braided rawhide with bits of metal interwoven into the tips.
- Asbestos tape is interwove from asbestos warp and weft yarns, suitable for lagging for boilers and pipe lines, also used as thermal insulating materials.
- Huge tentacles of the fat, purple octopus were interwoven with a mix of grated carrots, peppers, cubes of boiled potato and frisee leaves.
Synonyms intertwine, entwine, interlace, interthread, splice, braid, plait - 1.1with object Blend closely.
Wordsworth's political ideas are often interwoven with his philosophical and religious beliefs Example sentencesExamples - This award-winning novel interweaves the life of a San Francisco filmmaker with the life of a courtesan priestess of Inanna.
- The sacred and the profane, the high-minded and the obscene, the brutal and the clinically hilarious are interwoven with rare theatrical craft.
- It interweaves stories from the author's own childhood, revealing how her relationship with her own mother has shaped the choices she has made.
- Nonetheless, the lives of fishermen are interwoven with the sea.
- With such a brilliant set piece, you can envisage where the comedy comes from, but as in the first play, any humour is interwoven with the power of real drama.
- Christians, Muslims and Hindus gave prime importance to spirituality, and religion was interwoven with everyday life.
- Sexual attitudes, knowledge, and sexual experiences in earlier years are closely interwoven with sexual desire.
- So deeply and often invisibly is religion interwoven with tradition here, few are predicting an easy ride ahead.
- Such problems are interwoven with economic, political and social history.
- The ceremony interwove, and was interwoven with, notions of masculinity, modernity, and nation-formation.
- My experience is interwoven with that of others.
- Themes dealt with include place and identity, both personal and regional, and they are interwoven with a constant human presence in the works.
- The New Leipzig School is genealogically interwoven with the old one and shaped by a tradition of perfected craftsmanship.
- Baseball illustrates how seamlessly English is interwoven with Japanese.
- The voice of the client, her narration, is interwoven with the theoretical discussion.
- They often interwove personal experiences into their writing, and like their heroines, these authors were constrained economically and socially due to their gender.
- Songs are interwoven with the narrative, so it's a new thing for them.
- The rejection of linear time is, for many postmodern thinkers, closely interwoven with two other crucial issues.
- Closely interwoven with this belief is their intuition that in the country there lies a potent source of inspiration and imagery that they as artists should not ignore.
- The fact is that the settlement of the West was closely interwoven with the evolution of arms technology in America.
Synonyms interlink, link, connect, associate
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