How To Use Intermixture In A Sentence

  • Is hysteria fundamentally a psychological disorder with physical manifestations; an organic disease with mental and emotional epiphenomena; or some inseparable intermixture of the two?
  • a large intermixture of sand
  • So strangely were good and evil intermixed in the character of these celebrated brethren; and the intermixture was the secret of their gigantic power. The History of England, from the Accession of James II — Volume 2
  • The area is, or was, one of great ethnic intermixture. Times, Sunday Times
  • For their speeches are either premeditate, in _verbis conceptis_, where nothing is left to invention, or merely extemporal, where little is left to memory; whereas in life and action there is least use of either of these, but rather of intermixtures of premeditation and invention, notes and memory. Library of the World's Best Literature, Ancient and Modern — Volume 3
Linguix Browser extension
Fix your writing
on millions of websites
Linguix writing coach
  • Occasionally, where the silvery sand was darkened by a considerable intermixture of mould, there would be a large plantation, with negro-quarters, and a cotton-press and ginhouse. A Journey in the Seaboard Slave States; With Remarks on Their Economy
  • Often there is an intermixture. Smithsonian
  • If, when the eye is impressed with visionary images that last for a while, we look on colored surfaces, an intermixture also takes place; the spectrum is determined to a new colour... Brett Baker: February NYC Exhibitions: New York Overflows With Painting
  • The law of sexuality in plants leads to the intermarriage of the vigorous with the decaying and the intermixture of blossoms; nor can human plants long vegetate together without intermarriages, which ingraft the vigorous constitutions with the virus of the old and decaying. Mexico and its Religion With Incidents of Travel in That Country During Parts of the Years 1851-52-53-54, and Historical Notices of Events Connected With Places Visited
  • It is the lurid intermixture of the two that produces the illuminating blaze of the infernal regions.
  • delicate shadings result from the intermixture of dyes
  • Building on the practices and stories that survived - or emerged from -- hundreds of years of cultural intermixture, oppression, and natural evolution, social movement leaders constructed a powerful narrative of origin from which to build cultural pride and political power. Nathaniel Loewentheil: Bolivia: One Llama's Great Incan Adventure
  • The intermixture is the more complicated because one cannot attempt to distinguish a race by physical characteristics, by their personal appearance or features as marking descent from one stock. Studies in Literature and History
  • the increasing intermixture of different communities
  • landscapes with an intermixture of architecture
  • In Beaumont and Fletcher's tragedies the comic scenes are rarely so interfused amidst the tragic as to produce a unity of the tragic on the whole, without which the intermixture is a fault. Specimens of the Table Talk of Samuel Taylor Coleridge
  • Oak and hazel were probably dominant, but with an intermixture of other species, including birch, alder - a tree of wetlands - ash and elm, which varied regionally.
  • But the intermixture soon absorbed a substantial part of the population, approaching 40 percent by 1803 and likely constituting a national majority by the time of Mexican independence in 1821. A Country of Vast Designs
  • The popular imagination seasoned the sombre Parisian sink with some indescribably hideous intermixture of the infinite. Les Miserables
  • Brahmins and Jains go even further in this intermixture of faith and cookery, and shun everything that even looks like red meat: watermelon, tomatoes. Cardiac
  • And tradition, in a country so free of intermixture with foreigners, and among a people so strongly attached to the memory of their ancestors, has preserved many of them in a great measure incorrupted to this day. Fragments of Ancient Poetry
  • Though it is essentially an Aryan language like our own, and contains only a slight intermixture of Tartar words, -- such as bashlyk (a hood), kalpak Russia

Report a problem

Please indicate a type of error

Additional information (optional):

This website uses cookies to make Linguix work for you. By using this site, you agree to our cookie policy