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intermarry

[ US /ˌɪntɝˈmæɹi/ ]
[ UK /ˌɪntəmˈæɹi/ ]
VERB
  1. marry within the same ethnic, social, or family group

How To Use intermarry In A Sentence

  • Interestingly, although people with varying levels of some personality traits, such as neuroticism, agreeableness and conscientiousness, intermarry at a seemingly random rate, high-sensation seekers - as well as those on the low end of the sensation-seeking scale - tend to pick similarly arousable people as mates. Evolutionary psychology explores ancient and newer roots of instinctual fears
  • They have been intermarrying for generations, which usually involves stepbrothers and stepsisters marrying one another.
  • Latinos are everywhere in this country; we are present and we are intermarrying at a faster pace than other non-white groups. Maria Hinojosa: The Latino List: 'We Are America'
  • The propensity of different groups to intermarry is affected by their numbers in the population.
  • Among the Fur group, ironworkers formed the lowest rung of the social ladder and were not allowed to intermarry with those of other classes.
  • The priestly caste does not normally intermarry with the warrior caste.
  • I mean, even some of my ancestors from Germany and Southern England who arrived in, say Rowan County, North Carolina, a Scot stronghald, they promptly began intermarrying with Scots, taking on the culture and behavior. Great Scots
  • She felt that there were cultural and language barriers that kept Seattle Ashkenazim and Sephardim from socializing and intermarrying in Seattle. Personal Information for Fortuna Calvo-Roth
  • They tended to intermarry because they understood each other. THE MOAT AROUND MURCHESON'S EYE
  • It tells of the long centuries Tutsi and Hutu lived together, intermarrying and raising their children, until the coming of the Belgians in the 1800s. Overcoming Speechlessness: A Poet Encounters "the horror" in Rwanda, Eastern Congo and Palestine/Israel
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