[
US
/ˌɪntɝˈspɝs/
]
VERB
- introduce one's writing or speech with certain expressions
-
place at intervals in or among
intersperse exclamation marks in the text
How To Use intersperse In A Sentence
- A subsequent kerfuffle (rather drawn out) sounding not unlike a fist fight interspersed with successive shards of glass falling. BEHINDLINGS
- Life is just like an old time rail journey ... delays, sidetracks, smoke, dust, cinders, and jolts, interspersed only occasionally by beautiful vistas and thrilling bursts of speed. The trick is to thank the Lord for letting you have the ride. Gordon B. Hinckley
- Those talking heads are interspersed with archive footage of the great man himself. The Sun
- They were interspersed with rows of vines, whose high branches must have made the harvest very hard work.
- She shifts effortlessly from folk and blues to upbeat tangos and haunting instrumentals, all interspersed with humorous tales of her life on the road.
- The borders are filled with a variety of old fashioned roses interspersed with pink deutzias for effect before they flower.
- Interspersed among the spermatozoa are what appear to be the cytoplasmic contents of degraded cells.
- Through forty-five songs interspersed with dialogue and scriptural verses, the play emphasized the Saint's complete devotional self-surrender.
- Taking a natural view of the country, it is barren, sandy, and mountainous, interspersed with a few green spots, called oases, or made fertile by the inundation of some river in the rainy season. Incidents Connected with the Life of Selim Aga, A Native of Central Africa
- I also interspersed these with spinach, so all my spinach seedlings are planted out now too.