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interwoven

[ US /ˌɪntɝˈwoʊvən/ ]
[ UK /ˌɪntəwˈə‍ʊvən/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. linked or locked closely together as by dovetailing

How To Use interwoven In A Sentence

  • “Amelia” has an expressive score interwoven with moments of seeming simplicity: hymn tunes, a capella ensembles, and brief instrumental solos rising from the pit, all divided into scenes with orchestral intermezzi. "Amelia" at the Seattle Opera
  • The six tapestries she planted come alive with interwoven threads of color and texture from golden boxleaf honeysuckle, lavender, hebe, leatherleaf sedge, and Bowles' golden sedge bordered by dwarf boxwood.
  • Each was composed of interwoven strands, themselves composed of up to a dozen more. Tuning the Rig: A Journey to the Arctic
  • Even if I have different objects interwoven or crosscutting one another or in a certain kind of contrapuntal configuration, the clarity is really important to me. NewMusicBox
  • Since it was official multicultural policy that different cultures should be preserved rather than blended, spliced and interwoven, this all seemed rational.
  • The values of privacy and the values of home are closely interwoven, especially in contemporary middle-class culture.
  • It was a crossbarred pattern, with many hues cunningly interwoven. The Color of Her Panties
  • Cotton thread produced on spinning wheels or spinning jennies was not generally strong enough to be used as the warp as well as the weft of cloth, which meant that it had to be interwoven with linen or wool yarn. 'The Industrial Revolutionaries'
  • 'Ah, Sir!' cried he, 'if you knew how little is to be apprehended from the world, where the whole heart is already absorbed in attachment, contracted in the early dawn of life, and interwoven with the very existence, you would not feel these fears, nor wound me with these doubts.' The Old Manor House
  • Therefore, we are supposed to believe that Darwinian evolution is a reality within which all valid science is complementarily interwoven?
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