How To Use Enmeshed In A Sentence

  • However, the duck confit was cut up in cold bits and enmeshed in a strange, oily construction of mushrooms and haricots verts.
  • But they were already enmeshed in politics. The English Civil War: A People's History
  • Despite the skill with which Jellicoe and Beatty had enmeshed the High Seas Fleet, Iron Duke had fired only nine salvos when Scheer turned his ships around and vanished into the mist. Castles of Steel
  • In postwar years, the royal protection team found itself increasingly enmeshed in a web of protocol. The Bullet Catchers
  • The Spanish civil war ushered in a new era in which the civilian population was enmeshed in the conflict.
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  • Even songs we can't stand ricochet in our minds; those that we love become enmeshed with our innermost feelings and memories.
  • Congress worried about becoming enmeshed in a foreign war.
  • But they were already enmeshed in politics. The English Civil War: A People's History
  • The research team identified three distinct family profiles-one happy, termed cohesive, and two unhappy, termed disengaged and enmeshed. The Hindu - Home
  • The typical Czech "greengrocer" - Havel's famous description of the symbolic Czech Everyman - did not believe Soviet propaganda, but felt helplessly enmeshed in it. Yahoo! News: Business - Opinion
  • From a narrative standpoint the book is chancier with three protagonists, each enmeshed in their own lushly described Gibson-esque world (all taking place in familiar "Sprawl" setting). William Gibson's Novels: A Fractured Delight
  • In postwar years, the royal protection team found itself increasingly enmeshed in a web of protocol. The Bullet Catchers
  • The world is hydra headed, as old as the rocks and as changing as the sea, enmeshed inextricably in its ways.
  • The girl was enmeshed in a web of deceit and lies.
  • Once they are enmeshed in the often-chaotic foster care system it is extraordinarily difficult to get out of it.
  • Mr. Elling used the big band for a Claude Thornhill-like ballad effect on "More Than You Know" and, more contemporarily, enmeshed himself within the brass and reed sections as he scatted "Tumbleweed" from Michael Brecker 's final album, "Pilgrimage". Birthday Wishes, Halloween Dreams
  • They have since struggled to make a reappearance, as movies have become more and more enmeshed in the Hollywood discourse.
  • While he has never served at Westminster, he has been enmeshed in politics for most of his adult life.
  • She's getting enmeshed in a tangle of lies, and Tom is certainly going to find out about it.
  • There wouldn't have been any way in the world to not become enmeshed in the campaign.
  • In the first place, it is important to realize that faith has always come enmeshed in a cultural context.
  • He often experienced the self not as infinitely removed from particulars but as hopelessly enmeshed in them.
  • As creator, the writer puts his or her own subjectivity in play by projecting it into the interiority of the character enmeshed in the social world represented in the novel.
  • To us, enmeshed in the ties of interest and affection, the various heredities and the worldly Insights and Heresies Pertaining to the Evolution of the Soul
  • But while it is true that the United States is again enmeshed in controversial wars in Asia, the circumstances prompting the show's rebellious acts feel as if they bear only tangential resemblance to modern America. The wonderfully unruly 'Hair' is still a blowout 42 years after its Broadway debut
  • Congress worried about becoming enmeshed in a foreign war.
  • A thought that brought home to Marianne the two-way deception in which she suddenly found herself enmeshed. OUT OF THE ASHES
  • As [Harvard professor Marc] Hauser faces federal inquiry, many of his former co-authors, graduate students, and undergraduate advisees struggle to comprehend how the man they knew as a prolific researcher, skilled communicator, and heavyweight in the field of cognitive psychology became enmeshed in scandal. A Harvard Professor's Fall From Grace
  • I have seen men enmeshed by a corset cover no prettier, no daintier, than these of yours I have seen on the line. CHAPTER III
  • enmeshed in financial difficulties
  • In postwar years, the royal protection team found itself increasingly enmeshed in a web of protocol. The Bullet Catchers
  • Patrick Kurp really touches upon the heart of the matter when he describes the Green cover, though; and, that word, "enmeshed," just seamlessly pulls the sleek synchro-feel of it all together, IMO. Something I missed ...
  • The tiger was enmeshed in the web laid by hunter.
  • Not much happens in the opening episode until the last few minutes, but through Hector's eyes, we begin to see a dim outline of the old loyalties, new affinities, sibling rivalries, marital disharmonies, personal pressures and secrets in which he and his guests are enmeshed. TV review: The Slap; The Future State of Welfare; Panorama – Dale Farm: the Big Eviction
  • Remaining in the transport portfolio would, according to the PDs, leave the Tanaiste enmeshed in protracted union disputes.
  • These hundreds of materials, many of them hazardous, are all enmeshed and entwined, which is why recycling the components and materials from my laptop later, after its eventual disposal, will be such a hassle. THE STORY OF STUFF
  • But they were already enmeshed in politics. The English Civil War: A People's History
  • He probably became too much of a public figure, too enmeshed in politics, too willing to talk about matters beyond monetary policy. Times, Sunday Times
  • But they were already enmeshed in politics. The English Civil War: A People's History
  • Meanwhile, William was enmeshed in a desperate war in the Netherlands.
  • He became enmeshed in the suffrage movement that Olive supported. Times, Sunday Times
  • I recognise that it is sometimes easy when enmeshed in a dispute to attribute deep-laid cynical plans to the other party, but I do not think that that analysis is likely.
  • Since the end of the Vietnam War in the early 1970s, the United States has been more deeply enmeshed and invested in this region than anywhere else. David Nassar: Arab Voices: What They Are Saying to Us and Why It Matters
  • The avowed objective was to underpin one of the favored Lebanese factions enmeshed in the multilateral disputes in the country.
  • All Saints was deeply enmeshed with Iceland. Times, Sunday Times
  • He probably became too much of a public figure, too enmeshed in politics, too willing to talk about matters beyond monetary policy. Times, Sunday Times
  • Doing something to address one's situation or circumstances is deeply enmeshed in Western culture.
  • Gromyko red goatfish Univalved Camelshair osiris Revolutionize Elenchtic midiron terebenthene ashton Rape root aegina orange mushroom pimple enmeshed phenotype Cloff Antivenereal draggy call letters fomenter curvaceously disorganize catch fire Hearth money community of priests To take the veil Fraser fir renter drumbeater Ouachita thalamocortical Palatal marsupia STM Craigslist | all for sale / wanted in san diego
  • Her work is so deeply enmeshed in knots of aesthetic theory that it has lost sight of its own appearance. Times, Sunday Times
  • The researchers reportedly go with one of the more obvious ones: Kids grouped with lots of other young delinquents end up enmeshed in a “culture of deviance” where criminality is both taught and valorized. More Punishment, More Crime
  • Richard, staying with the Merediths in Lusaka, had become thoroughly enmeshed with their servants" lives. THE IMAGE OF LAURA
  • He probably became too much of a public figure, too enmeshed in politics, too willing to talk about matters beyond monetary policy. Times, Sunday Times
  • Today, the Falun Gong is deeply enmeshed in a propaganda war with Beijing.
  • At the meeting, he finds himself enmeshed in a discussion of complaints about the paper's political coverage.
  • Vita tried to call her husband, but he was enmeshed in his own crisis.
  • They are depicted as descending by themselves, or with the dove of the Holy Spirit, or with the incarnate Christ Child enmeshed among the luminous striations.
  • For a second or so, there is a complete communion between us, as our respective states of contentment become momentarily enmeshed.
  • She begins to correspond with club members and, after deciding to visit them, becomes enmeshed in their lives – though a handsome American publishing tycoon is courting her back in London. A Totally Unauthorized Reading Group Guide ‘The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society,’ a Novel by Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows « One-Minute Book Reviews
  • He is safely enmeshed in the webs of scholarship.
  • Adapted from an award-winning play, Closer examines the lives of four people who become enmeshed in a tawdry tale of adultery.
  • The element of passion that gets enmeshed with the expectations on both sides needs no reiteration here.
  • Congress worried about becoming enmeshed in a foreign war.
  • It does not advance them at all; it gets them enmeshed in a relationship of codependency.
  • The difference is that those field lines are enmeshed within the electrically charged, superheated plasma that comprises the body of the Sun.
  • But they were already enmeshed in politics. The English Civil War: A People's History
  • By the time he was grown, I was again enmeshed in the school year calendar because of my job in the high school. Moving Right Along
  • Earl is so enmeshed in his youngest son's identity that he becomes a bore.
  • All Saints was deeply enmeshed with Iceland. Times, Sunday Times
  • His TV Dinner was a feast of curiosities enmeshed with the everyday, a meal that leaves one feeling slightly queasy, even overstuffed, but eager for more.
  • All Saints was deeply enmeshed with Iceland. Times, Sunday Times
  • I have dim memories of other books being turned into ABC dramas, like perhaps Carrie's war by Nina Bawden, but they never overwrote the book - this one the book and the show are kind of enmeshed in my mind. Eglantine's cake
  • Modern primatologists point out that an alpha animal, contrary to its reputation as solitary lord of all it surveys, is thickly enmeshed in a social webbing, dependent on the reciprocities of group life.
  • She was justifiably shocked to find me already enmeshed in a version of that story.
  • The first generation was enmeshed in the struggle of making it in America, often changing their names and beliefs to fit in.
  • She says she is not like Lawrence, but we know the craft of writing has always been enmeshed in apprenticeship.
  • I am saddened that people lost money, I am saddened that people lost jobs, I am saddened that a major company is enmeshed in a major scandal.
  • Cartilage plates, blood vessels, and ganglia were also enmeshed in a thick fibromuscular coat.
  • The conspirators gradually become enmeshed by their own plot and are dismayed to find they are as susceptible as their victims.
  • The City was enmeshed in ritualistic and religious concepts.
  • Undoing the people's will is the mystical bait and switch known as the alchemistic art of the political magic, it's cornerstone and that ruling spirit is enmeshed in every aspect of the phantom system governance. Room Eight
  • Her work is so deeply enmeshed in knots of aesthetic theory that it has lost sight of its own appearance. Times, Sunday Times
  • You dream division in your fall of soul enmeshed in brawn of stuff. Archive 2009-07-01
  • Nerve cells, like those of the brain, are enmeshed in fatty tissue.
  • Increased perivillous fibrin was diagnosed when all nonperipheral placental sections showed that 5% or more of the terminal villi in the half of the villous parenchyma bordering the basal plate were enmeshed in a fibrinoid matrix.
  • The more he struggles, the more he is enmeshed.
  • He was enmeshed in a web of deceit and lies.
  • He probably became too much of a public figure, too enmeshed in politics, too willing to talk about matters beyond monetary policy. Times, Sunday Times
  • Magical beliefs and practices existed at all social levels in the medieval and early modern periods, and were enmeshed in medical and scientific thought and techniques.
  • The meeting was convoked as the euro-zone's financial strains further enmeshed Italy's sovereign debt, which at €1.6 trillion in tradable bonds is the region's largest. Spain, Italy Scramble to Combat Debt Woes
  • Life Partners has been enmeshed in controversy over whether it has provided inaccurately short estimates of how long the insured people are likely to live, a key part of the investment equation. Life Partners' Auditor Quits, Withdraws Opinion on 2010 Results
  • When we meet Johnny Rico and his pals, they are already enmeshed in combat, and we hear little about the war on a larger scale.
  • Japan is enmeshed in a familiar quandary about how to provide military support without damaging its pacifist constitution.
  • All Saints was deeply enmeshed with Iceland. Times, Sunday Times
  • ... photographs from Camp Breadbasket showed British soldiers standing on Iraqis enmeshed in netting, forcing them to simulate oral and anal sex, feigning to punch them in the head and parading them around on forklift trucks. I Don't Often ...
  • enmeshed" and attempt to facilitate healthy separation and/or individuation. Simi Valley Acorn
  • On this basis alone they demonstrated themselves to be deeply enmeshed in a web of obligation and dependence.
  • He probably became too much of a public figure, too enmeshed in politics, too willing to talk about matters beyond monetary policy. Times, Sunday Times
  • But business was enmeshed in state controls - precisely the sort of thing it had hoped to avoid by helping the Fascists into power.
  • All of the left-of-centre governments in Latin America -- even that of Venezuela's Hugo Chávez -- have had to trim their sails to a greater or lesser degree, as they find their place within the conjuncture of forces in which their countries are enmeshed -- popular support versus well-financed domestic opposition, the global marketplace, and, of course, the brooding presence of the US. Archive 2009-03-01
  • Her work is so deeply enmeshed in knots of aesthetic theory that it has lost sight of its own appearance. Times, Sunday Times
  • But these positive achievements were enmeshed with the longer history of middle-class women's involvement in social regulation and class disciplining.
  • In postwar years, the royal protection team found itself increasingly enmeshed in a web of protocol. The Bullet Catchers
  • Carmen was ungovernable by nature, but at that stage in her life she was still enmeshed in the cobwebs of `what will people say. THREE KINDS OF KISSING - SCOTTISH SHORT STORIES
  • Once in Neverland, they become enmeshed in Peter's war with his arch-enemy, the nefarious Captain Hook.
  • When he disappears, and she eventually tries to find and help him, she too becomes enmeshed in the state frame-up against her husband.
  • It does not advance them at all; it gets them enmeshed in a relationship of codependency.
  • All Saints was deeply enmeshed with Iceland. Times, Sunday Times
  • It was like being enmeshed in a giant web - there was no way to escape the destiny that awaited this world.
  • They're all enmeshed in the on-going debate on how Germany should deal with the files of the former East German secret police - the Stasi.
  • In postwar years, the royal protection team found itself increasingly enmeshed in a web of protocol. The Bullet Catchers
  • Her work is so deeply enmeshed in knots of aesthetic theory that it has lost sight of its own appearance. Times, Sunday Times
  • The tiger was enmeshed in the web laid by hunter.
  • The international sector Our economy is deeply enmeshed in a complex web of economic relationships with the rest of the world.
  • Even when their produce is earning the country billions of dollars, their lives are enmeshed in poverty, illiteracy, and misery.
  • Mr. Bruno is enmeshed in a widening criminal investigation into his business ties to people seeking state money or actions.
  • Her work is so deeply enmeshed in knots of aesthetic theory that it has lost sight of its own appearance. Times, Sunday Times
  • The morning star has the same palpitating hush; the early light is enmeshed in the branches that overbrow your window, as in those other days. The Fugitive

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