[ US /ˌɪntɝtˈwaɪn/ ]
[ UK /ˌɪntətwˈa‍ɪn/ ]
VERB
  1. make a loop in
    loop a rope
  2. spin, wind, or twist together
    intertwined hearts
    intertwine the ribbons
    Twine the threads into a rope
  3. make lacework by knotting or looping
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How To Use intertwine In A Sentence

  • Most of their debut album is sung a cappella, voices intertwined with telepathic understanding. The Sun
  • It's a bizarre concept that intertwines issues of patriotism and sporting chauvinism.
  • Their journeys intertwine and overlap, and during sequences in which they go their separate but parallel ways, director Gustad employs jarring cross-cutting to remind us of their journeys' thematic parallelisms.
  • In no other situation is the contemplation of living and dying so intertwined with love and sex.
  • The problems of crime and unemployment are closely intertwined.
  • The entire modern history of South Africa is inextricably intertwined with sport. Times, Sunday Times
  • This is neither surprising or unique, as nation and state have been closely intertwined concepts in the modem world.
  • By the early decades of the nineteenth century, Levy explains, consistent pressure on women's reading habits had caused cultural and biological reproduction to become intertwined.
  • Thus began my journey into astrology - a journey where law and astrology have been closely intertwined.
  • In his mind, religion and politics were inseparably intertwined.
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