How To Use Entwine In A Sentence

  • Silently, too, they walked under the IC, past the entwined hearts, the graphic drawings, the amazing suggestions. FAMILY PICTURES
  • I entwined my fingers with hers, experiencing relief and dissolved anxiety as I felt her squeeze back.
  • She caught students red-handed with their parts entwined frequently, and the rest of the student body talked about sex as if it was just as normal as attending a baseball game or playing video games. Daniel P. Malito: The Scarlet e-Letter
  • Oh, and did I mention the two red roses entwined on our bed by a single silk ribbon? Times, Sunday Times
  • These were substantially built of timber and talipots, thatched with cadjans and bamboo leaves, and festooned and decorated as the Singhalese only can decorate - leaves, flowers and fruit being entwined together with so much delicacy and airy tastefulness as to impart an almost fairy-like form to the pavilion.
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  • The pale woman, bosom exposed, is entwined with a dark man wearing a sullen expression and a skull cap.
  • It is a cautionary tale with wry observations about our decadent society entwined around a mournful melody. Times, Sunday Times
  • It had arches and balconies entwined with bougainvillaea, and wide patios with tubs of vivid red geraniums. At The Spaniard's Convenience
  • My own family's history is deeply entwined with that of the Northcote electorate.
  • The two are so entwined they are virtually inseparable. The Sun
  • It's a cliché, but also a truism, that love and hate are not opposites but, rather, intimately entwined.
  • The ivy and the vine and the poppy were closely entwined. Times, Sunday Times
  • Around them are entwined canonic melodies of disarming ingenuousness. Times, Sunday Times
  • They walked together with their arms entwined.
  • But, of course, the two are inextricably entwined. Times, Sunday Times
  • Apple, pear, plum and cherry trees shadow the hard tennis court which has full perimeter fencing entwined with climbing roses and clematis.
  • It is a cautionary tale with wry observations about our decadent society entwined around a mournful melody. Times, Sunday Times
  • A skilled historian is able to entwine his inventory material with evidence gathered from a variety of other sources.
  • Second, fiscal and monetary policies have become closely entwined. Times, Sunday Times
  • Its collection of entwined stories is brilliantly constructed, moving between satirical comedy and unforced pathos. Times, Sunday Times
  • Delicate gold filigree entwined itself around her lower arm, wrist, and hand.
  • Its collection of entwined stories is brilliantly constructed, moving between satirical comedy and unforced pathos. Times, Sunday Times
  • The lattice, with its entwined flowering twig pattern, was finished in pink, bronze, and green by brushing on copper-based colorants.
  • Without any hesitation, I entwine my legs with his and forcefully twist them, knocking him into the third guy there.
  • Here, again, social capital and property wealth are closely entwined. Times, Sunday Times
  • The crossvine, bignonia ‘Tangerine Beauty’ entwined with Killer on the clothesline pole posed a thorny problem if it was to be saved. Killer- An Update « Fairegarden
  • Although their paths diverge, their lives remain entwined. Times, Sunday Times
  • Lord HASTINGS unites the Hungerford sickle with the Peverel garbe: No. 270; and the _Dacre knot_ is entwined about the Dacre escallop and the famous “ragged staff” of Beauchamp and Neville: No. 235. The Handbook to English Heraldry
  • Rhodium - plated necklace with entwined clear crystal pav é loops; on snake chain.
  • Cool aqua marine blue entwined with canary yellow and feisty pink in intricate patterns and finely detailed paintings were printed onto the scarves.
  • Banks and governments are inextricably entwined in the eyes of creditors. Times, Sunday Times
  • A gerenuk on tiptoes, entwined in a thorn tree, lipping away the tender leaves. Jay Kirk: Museum Of Natural History And Carl Akeley's Jounrey To Build Its African Wing
  • She saw the law of our country as deeply entwined with our national history, and as defining a unique and precious perspective on the world. Times, Sunday Times
  • A young man in a white chef's toque entwined with tinsel appeared from the kitchen. THE WHITE DOVE
  • All I know is, while we're walking, he suddenly grabs my hand and entwines our fingers together.
  • There was an apotheosis in which all three figures were shown entombed, enshrined, mummified together but not entwined.
  • He touched the entwined dragons that were blazoned onto his skin.
  • Red tape is entwined into our history. Times, Sunday Times
  • So doesn't it follow that it should be closely entwined with our sense of identity? Times, Sunday Times
  • In the meantime Dame Elspeth assisted to disembarrass the damsel whom she destined for her future daughter-inlaw, of her hood, mantle, and the rest of her riding gear, giving her to appear as beseemed the buxom daughter of the wealthy Miller, gay and goodly, in a white kirtle, the seams of which were embroidered with green silken lace or fringe, entwined with some silver thread. The Monastery
  • The bars represent lines of print on a page, and the caduceus was the winged wand entwined with serpents carried by Mercury, the messenger of the gods. The World of 1975
  • Her eyes sought the monogram sculptured on the stone gate-pillars: 'E. L.' entwined in graceful curves on a rounded shield upheld by playful amorini. A German Pompadour Being the Extraordinary History of Wilhelmine van Grävenitz, Landhofmeisterin of Wirtemberg
  • Second, fiscal and monetary policies have become closely entwined. Times, Sunday Times
  • Their lives would be closely entwined for six years. Times, Sunday Times
  • A lot of his advisers want us more closely entwined. The Sun
  • The two for me are inextricably entwined, as I suspect they are for most artists. Improve Your Landscape Painting
  • So, as we learn more about stratospheric ozone and climate change, what were once two separate problems have become more and more entwined.
  • The two for me are inextricably entwined, as I suspect they are for most artists. Improve Your Landscape Painting
  • The ageing process might have begun for him then - his forehead wrinkled, like an unironed cloth, with the worries of the world entwined in each strain of the fabric.
  • At the bottom of the bell, a white silhouette of a boy holds a rope entwined to the clapper.
  • The education of the third in line to the throne is closely entwined with the question of privacy. Times, Sunday Times
  • And thus it comes about that the ecclesiastical model of marriage entwines the lay one without a hitch, and in its embrace foreshadows a revolutionary way of looking at marriage.
  • But, of course, the two are inextricably entwined. Times, Sunday Times
  • It is more productive to think of orthodoxy and orthopraxy as mutually entwined in all religious traditions. The Times Literary Supplement
  • Just as concepts are entwined with perception, so too theory is entwined with experiment.
  • His descriptions of daily life show how manhood was closely entwined with the needs and expectations of a man's neighbors. American Manhood: Transformations in Masculinity from the Revolution to the Modern Era
  • 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
  • Sharon's bass and breathily intoned vocals are often the crux of a song, and sparseness and restraint always the watchwords, with even guest Johnny Marr reining himself in so his guitar sinuously entwines with the bass and synth lines on Can't Put it Down Until it Ends. Pajama Club: Pajama Club – review
  • Although the different stories may have no relationship with each other, the cast of characters make them entwine. Jackie K. Cooper: "Southland" Keeps Alive the "NYPD Blue" Tradition
  • Their lives were entwined in a special way and during that time familiarity bred its own sense of humour.
  • As our political judgments often turn on similar criteria, I’m not as sanguine as KA that the two can be so easily disentwined, which doesn’t mean that attempting to do so would be any less valuable, especially if it leads us to compelling critiques of presents practice such as the one KA makes. The Volokh Conspiracy » Voting, Religion, and Public Officials:
  • He brought her in close to his side, hands entwined behind them in a criss-cross, moving quickly in a circle.
  • Claws linked tightly to claws while spiny legs entwined, the chitonous queue continuing to thicken and grow even as those aboard the trapped vessel gathered to gaze at the astonishing sight. A Triumph of Souls
  • Our views of leadership are entwined with ideas of heroism.
  • It is the interweaved story of five characters, four of which are pulled from her other stories, being pulled together and entwined at an inn ... by Papa Ghede. Thor's Day
  • In the crown cavetto of the cornice is an Egyptian winged globe, entwined with serpents, emblematical of time and eternity; and on the faci below is engraved the following line: -- The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction Volume 10, No. 273, September 15, 1827
  • Her cheeks and nose were red from the biting cold wind, and pine needles had managed to entwine themselves in her hair and clothes, giving her quite a disheveled look.
  • Her slightly loopy patchworked circles do not overlap or entwine. The Queen of the 'Neo-Hillbilly' Quilt
  • It is a cautionary tale with wry observations about our decadent society entwined around a mournful melody. Times, Sunday Times
  • It must have been a last moonflower vision that showed me jasmine and bryony growing all over the bed, I entwine. Wildfire
  • A red chaperon or cap, with long hanging cornette, sat daintily on the back of his black-curled head, while his gold-hued shoes were twisted up _a la poulaine_, as though the toes were shooting forth a tendril which might hope in time to entwine itself around his massive leg. The White Company
  • How does your this individual resemble a devil I do not put same entwine!
  • The image also invokes the caduceus - snake entwined staff, symbol of Aesculapius, Greco-Roman god of medicine, and carried by Mercury.
  • She saw the law of our country as deeply entwined with our national history, and as defining a unique and precious perspective on the world. Times, Sunday Times
  • With our slippery fingers still entwined, we made our way past a sunburned fisherman unhooking a sand shark — his fourth, judging by the pile in the middle of the pier — from his fishing rod. Myrtle Beach Daze
  • Norman gathered the boy up, and as soon as he could disentwine his little arms from about his neck, turned him toward Keith. Gordon Keith
  • The book entwines the personal and the political to chart the history of four generations of the family.
  • These two things are entwined - we provide a service and help keep people well. Times, Sunday Times
  • Here, again, social capital and property wealth are closely entwined. Times, Sunday Times
  • Their outstretched branches covered the mossy ground and entwined with the branches of the neighboring trees.
  • These two things are entwined - we provide a service and help keep people well. Times, Sunday Times
  • The picture captures the two lovers with their arms entwined.
  • The plant will entwine round the stick as it grows.
  • So doesn't it follow that it should be closely entwined with our sense of identity? Times, Sunday Times
  • Golding's challenge to any definite sense of comprehension through superficial perception is inextricably entwined with his writing's own visual aspects.
  • Oh, and did I mention the two red roses entwined on our bed by a single silk ribbon? Times, Sunday Times
  • So it was fitting that, immediately after a funeral and cremation in Aberystwyth, her birthplace, she should have been remembered in a service at the small Bethel chapel in Trefenter, the Cardiganshire village on Mynydd Bach, the mountain with which her life had been closely entwined. Lowri Gwilym obituary
  • The education of the third in line to the throne is closely entwined with the question of privacy. Times, Sunday Times
  • Banks and governments are inextricably entwined in the eyes of creditors. Times, Sunday Times
  • Here, again, social capital and property wealth are closely entwined. Times, Sunday Times
  • Pete had had his fingers entwined in her red locks and she had let her hands roam his back when the door was suddenly flung open.
  • The breeze disentwined her hair.
  • We still have here to disentwine or disentangle his own from the weeds of glorious and of other than glorious feature with which Fletcher has thought fit to interweave them; even in the close of the last scene of all we can say to a line, to a letter, where Shakespeare ends and Fletcher begins. A Study of Shakespeare
  • In the tableau, you want to entwine flowers, candlesticks and personal objects, such as a bronze sculpture or a fleet of nutcrackers. The Host's Secret Weapon: Merciless Perfection
  • The club's fortunes were considered to be inextricably entwined with those of their, supposedly, one stellar performer.
  • The lattice, with its entwined flowering twig pattern, was finished in pink, bronze, and green by brushing on copper-based colorants.
  • The histories of our two countries are entwined like no other, yet that history has been routinely and tragically ignored or forgotten. Times, Sunday Times
  • Vine-leaves and bunches of grapes decorate some of the more ancient columns inside the church, and grotesque mediæval monsters, such as monkish architects habitually delighted in, entwine themselves around the capitals of others. Facts About Champagne and Other Sparkling Wines
  • Flowers and berries of honeysuckle entwine new growth on woody tops of the banks and, in the footings, the poisonous scarlet berries of arum – or cuckoo pint – are unusually prolific. Country diary: St Stephens-by-Saltash
  • Both are dramatic and closely entwined for much of the period. Times, Sunday Times
  • I was recently told by a - fortune-teller that my fate is entwined with some mystery. A PLAGUE OF ANGELS
  • These two things are entwined - we provide a service and help keep people well. Times, Sunday Times
  • There is a danger the two could get entwined. Times, Sunday Times
  • The two partsprecedingare nowentwinedand come together inconclusion. Book Chick City
  • The two are so entwined they are virtually inseparable. The Sun
  • The machine shuddered, then swayed as if trying to regain its balance, there was a loud creaking from the metal plates and the entwined canes, and suddenly, as if it were being sucked in by a luminous vortex, it went up making two complete turns, and no sooner had it risen above the walls of the coach-house than it recovered its balance, raised its head like a seagull, and soared like an arrow straight up into the sky. José Saramago - Excerpt from "Baltasar and Blimunda"
  • They strolled through the park, with arms entwined.
  • Both are dramatic and closely entwined for much of the period. Times, Sunday Times
  • For a colorful, exotic effect, entwine two scarves together before wrapping your hair.
  • Nowhere have so many muscular and healthy bodies been put on display, so many entwined haymakers and tractor drivers, workers and peasants, strong men and women.
  • The boys attacked them with stones, and the reptiles quickly disentwined them - selves, and made battle for some time, by hissing at their assailants; one, more bold than the rest, advanced towards one of the boys, who fortunately killed it with a stone; it measured above four feet in length, and had several frogs in its belly. Omniana, or Horae otiosiores
  • The rich polysemic nature of Kanak languages, some intricately entwined with Polynesian vocabularies, testify to these congruences of aquatic and terrestrial meaning.
  • His fate was closely entwined with her.
  • Indeed, the cheap financing is leading some European banks to take steps that further entwine them with their governments. European Banks Rush to Grasp Lifeline
  • Look at all those wires running up and down the walls, entwined like over-cooked spaghetti on an unappetizing plate.
  • It is a cautionary tale with wry observations about our decadent society entwined around a mournful melody. Times, Sunday Times
  • Oh, and did I mention the two red roses entwined on our bed by a single silk ribbon? Times, Sunday Times
  • The fate of major British sporting projects are inextricably entwined.
  • Still, what if such a thing as a "make love not war" (assuming those two things are not totally entwined) gene or epigene existed and such things as "love potions" (Cree medicine) were possible? Prairiemary
  • But, of course, the two are inextricably entwined. Times, Sunday Times
  • My hand rests lightly on his gray hair, our legs are still entwined.
  • Alongside, or occasionally entwined with the bones, ran the army telegraph cable!
  • The women—bare shouldered, their hair à la bacchante, with long curls at the back entwined with vine leaves and bunches of grapes—waltzed around the staid little queen. THE DIAMOND
  • And his late, superb "Le Chateau de Chillon" 1874, a Swiss castle famed for its many political prisoners that Courbet may have also studied in photographs, offers a haunting lesson in the formal and evocative beauty entwined in the landscape. The Rise and Fall of a Master
  • She was too cheerful and hopeful to really care because she couldn't entwine the two initials of the only name she knew into an artistic bowknot! A Little Miss Nobody Or, With the Girls of Pinewood Hall
  • He entwined his fingers with hers.
  • Tragedy and romance have never been so irresistibly entwined: the beautiful young queen, maddened by grief, hastening to join her dead lover, Mark Antony, through the kiss of an asp.
  • These produce natural arbours, rendered often still more compact by the assistance of an annual creeping plant which we call a vine, that never fails to entwine itself among their branches, and always produces a very desirable shade. Letters from an American Farmer
  • They walked round and round the ugly, ill-kept lawn; they walked under the beautiful trees, entwined their arms round each other's waists, and confabbed and confabbed. Girls of the Forest
  • Roses and honeysuckle entwine the little cottage.
  • Great memories are entwined with this recipe.
  • Both had wide platforms built around them in stone and mud, with three images of entwined snake gods embedded in the mud, close to the tree trunks.
  • CUBE, to 20 AugRobert ClarkOld traditions entwine with present-day concerns in work by the 10 finalists for the 2011 Jameel Prize. This week's new exhibitions
  • A red chaperon or cap, with long hanging cornette, sat daintily on the back of his black-curled head, while his gold-hued shoes were twisted up a la poulaine, as though the toes were shooting forth a tendril which might hope in time to entwine itself around his massive leg. The White Company
  • The number of different kinds of bushes in the hedgerows, entwined by traveller's joy and the bryonies, is conspicuous compared with the hedges of the northern counties. More Letters of Charles Darwin — Volume 1
  • Banks and governments are inextricably entwined in the eyes of creditors. Times, Sunday Times
  • While their paths diverged after 1990, their fates are entwined again this season.
  • White lights entwined with silver ribbon draped the window sills, door frames, and banister, bunched with clusters of holly and mistletoe.
  • And they teach the serpents there to entwine themselves up on long sticks out of the ground and of the scales of these serpents they brew out a brewage like to mead. Ulysses
  • The two are so entwined they are virtually inseparable. The Sun
  • Tristan Parkes's daft singalong songs and Rosie Chambers' woodland set of wood chippings, floorboards and furniture entwined in flora add to the pleasure of Lane and Wass's madly comic double act.
  • Before the case is over, Terry will become deeply entwined with Meg and the McCarransand learn that families, like war, can break the sturdiest of souls. In the Name of Honor by Richard North Patterson: Book summary
  • For seven minutes the quartet play a tuneless dirge that occasionally changes and is entwined with a slowly oscillating synthesizer.
  • In four decades of unstinting service to Rovers, he showed he possessed them all at one time or another, which is why he's become so entwined in the very fabric of his favourite football club.
  • A wave, higher than any they yet had had to ride, came boiling down upon them ... and twisting, writhing, upcasting imploring arms to the elements -- the implacable elements -- a girl, a dark girl, entwined, imprisoned in silken garments, swept upon its crest! The Yellow Claw
  • Flowers and berries of honeysuckle entwine new growth on woody tops of the banks and, in the footings, the poisonous scarlet berries of arum – or cuckoo pint – are unusually prolific. Country diary: St Stephens-by-Saltash
  • The British and Russian economies are deeply entwined. Times, Sunday Times
  • From the top it looked like an elaborate dance, four arms entwined, four legs shuffling around and between each other.
  • Confronted with such evidence, it would have been understandable if Europeans had looked at tobacco as so inextricably entwined with heathenish practice that they would want nothing to do with the plant.
  • Tragedy and romance have never been so irresistibly entwined: the beautiful young queen, maddened by grief, hastening to join her dead lover, Mark Antony, through the kiss of an asp.
  • I entwine my fingers in hers, and she watches me curiously. Miracles, Inc.
  • By the book's end, readers will find themselves as deeply entwined in the characters 'fates as Nunn is herself, and left to ruminate over a number of weighty debates as the tale weaves in double standards, double lives, emotional betrayal, murder, corruption and sexual deviance. A Beautiful Place to Die: Summary and book reviews of A Beautiful Place to Die by Malla Nunn.
  • Made entirely of gold, the legs were capitals shaped like lilies and entwined about the golden table were a filigree of vines entwined with acanthus, the sacred metal worked so expertly, he was sure that they were living plants of gold.
  • In fact, they are inextricably entwined. The Sun
  • The histories of our two countries are entwined like no other, yet that history has been routinely and tragically ignored or forgotten. Times, Sunday Times
  • People always cite cultural and historical ‘differences’ in this regard, but I think an even bigger issue is the more practical one of proximity, and the way it entwines our interests.
  • Printers and Graphic Designers have long lived in entwined chaos, each attempting to interpret the electronic wizards living within their individual computing systems. Rebecca Silver | Inhabitat
  • This was the forerunner of the caduceus, the snake-entwined rod which is today the emblem of the medical profession.
  • Well, it is a lightweight, intricately entwined, sparkling dainty flat chain in yellow and white gold in combination with coloured silk threads.
  • Facing each other, the giraffes were managing to entwine their necks in the most astonishing manner.
  • His conversations with these eclectic figures within scuba diving's short history (the aqualung was only invented 60 years ago) are entwined with his own memories of particular dives in different parts of the world.
  • Their lives would be closely entwined for six years. Times, Sunday Times
  • The girl forgives him and is entwined around him during the closing scenes.
  • It is through her that the multiplicity of other characters are entwined.
  • A casual, rusticated set with hay bales, trellises entwined with climbers and gentle harp music played live, establish a mood for us.
  • Boasting 15 tracks, four of which act as short instrumental interludes between songs, the album booklet includes landscapes and urban scenes entwined with vocalist Bruce Conlon's sappy poetry.
  • Melodies and counterpoints are entwined throughout the mix, grounded by the swagger of Fridmann's surprisingly muscular basslines.
  • Red tape is entwined into our history. Times, Sunday Times
  • They could see the name entwined in gilded letters amid the scrollwork of the frigate's stern; Hornblower remembered that Bush still was in ignorance of his source of information. Hornblower And The Hotspur
  • The two for me are inextricably entwined, as I suspect they are for most artists. Improve Your Landscape Painting
  • Honeysuckle will entwine round the stick as it grows.
  • Further on, other members of the court seek to use Shakespeare's name to pen shockingly awful plays, including Queen Elizabeth herself, with material that entwines her craving for affection with sadomasochistic urges.
  • Prayer and political action have a deeply entwined history in America. Christianity Today
  • The British and Russian economies are deeply entwined. Times, Sunday Times
  • Prayer and political action have a deeply entwined history in America. Christianity Today
  • Lazily, Bren watched slumped backward into the cool, itching grass, hands entwined behind once bright hair that had been lightened by long hours under a summer sun.
  • The ivy and the vine and the poppy were closely entwined. Times, Sunday Times
  • In an attempt to get data from this natural laboratory, particle physics has become ever more entwined with cosmology.
  • His dazed eyes stare at the eels, which still writhe and entwine.
  • The submariners' wives initially made a tapestry depicting the British and Russian ensigns entwined and a naval prayer, and sent it to Russia as gift of condolence - it now hangs in the Russian Military Museum in Moscow.
  • And yet no amount of government support can convince Mr. Eira that his livelihood, intractably entwined with the reindeer, is not about to change.
  • She had put these seeds into a little purse, the tissue of which was exceedingly simple; but which appeared above all price to Paul, when he saw on it a P and a V entwined together, and knew that the beautiful hair which formed the cypher was the hair of Virginia. Paul et Virginie. English
  • There is a danger the two could get entwined. Times, Sunday Times
  • He entwined his fingers with hers and looked into her eyes.
  • In Connemara their twofold national rivalry becomes a three-way affair as notions of Englishness and Irishness become entwined with the fact of political union and also with issues of class status.
  • His fate was closely entwined with her.
  • Seamlessly, he entwines Eastern prayer music through dark bass riffs, into ghetto yo-yos, delicate vocals and back into fuzzed-out bass breaks.
  • In fact, they are inextricably entwined. The Sun
  • Facing each other, the giraffes were managing to entwine their necks in the most astonishing manner.
  • The lattice, with its entwined flowering twig pattern, was finished in pink, bronze, and green by brushing on copper-based colorants.
  • A lot of his advisers want us more closely entwined. The Sun
  • It was raven black and the hair was entwined with a slim rope of gold thread and opals.
  • Both are dramatic and closely entwined for much of the period. Times, Sunday Times
  • Next to our beloved Washington, there is no name entwined with deeper interest in the hearts of Jerseymen, than LAFAYETTE -- None, which they will transmit to their posterity, encircled with a wreath of nobler praise, or embalmed with the incense of purer love, than that of the interesting stranger who embarked his life and fortune open the tempestuous ocean of our revolution -- and who fought at Brandywine, at Monmouth and at Memoirs of General Lafayette : with an Account of His Visit to America and His Reception By the People of the United State
  • The generous policy which would have restored the State and made a new union possible, which would have disentwined much of the passionate clinging to the past, was crossed by the death of the only man who could have carried it through, if even he could have carried it through; and years of trouble had to pass before the current of national life ran freely through the Southern The Creed of the Old South 1865-1915
  • Displaying a dark colour and a vibrant purple hue, the 2007 Pillar Box Red has bright aromas of blue and dark berry fruit entwined with liquorice, spearmint and cigar box complexity.
  • Passing the summerhouse, they walked along a curving path under a pergola of entwined clematis. SOMEWHERE EAST OF LIFE
  • But later than night, when she lay entwined with him on the lushly fabricked futon, as their sweat commingled, as she felt the double-beat pulse of his heart close to hers, as he gently entered her after the careful and delightful hours of sensuous preparations, Ikan knew what that feeling was. The Miko
  • The two for me are inextricably entwined, as I suspect they are for most artists. Improve Your Landscape Painting
  • Although their paths diverge, their lives remain entwined. Times, Sunday Times

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