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VERB
  1. weave together into a fabric or design

How To Use inweave In A Sentence

  • What attachments to the homestead shall thus inweave themselves about the hearts of those whose interests and life are cast with it -- and still more, of those who go forth from it, by taste, inclination, or bias, into the more bustling centres of competition and trade! The Continental Monthly, Vol. 5, No. 5, May, 1864 Devoted To Literature And National Policy
  • And thou, Nature! surround him with mountains, cliffs, and seas; lull him with golden dawns and crimson eves; inweave him in thy magic circle of azure days and starry nights; O mother Nature -- closely embrace the The Continental Monthly, Vol. 6, No 3, September 1864 Devoted To Literature And National Policy
  • I am not trying to inweave you into being the fifty-first State. Men, Missiles and Misunderstandings
  • In his account, however, though he inserts it as early as the year 1639 in his Memoir, he inweaves recollections that must span from 1639 to 1646, so as to describe in one passage his uncle's training of boys from the age of ten to that of fifteen or sixteen: -- The Life of John Milton Volume 3 1643-1649
  • Tissue of History, which inweaves all Being: watch well, or it will be past thee, and seen no more. Sartor Resartus, and On Heroes, Hero-Worship, and the Heroic in History
  • Finally when this, and this alone, could have induced a genuine Poet to inweave in a poem of the loftiest style, and on subjects the loftiest and of most universal interest, such minute matters of fact, (not unlike those furnished for the obituary of a magazine by the friends of some obscure "ornament of society lately deceased" in some obscure town,) as Biographia Literaria
  • Sliding between her raiment and smooth breasts, it coils without touch, and instils its viperous breath unseen; the great serpent turns into the twisted gold about her neck, turns into the long ribbon of her chaplet, inweaves her hair, and winds slippery over her body. The Aeneid of Virgil
  • She is said to have cut off the head of Franquet d’Arras, a Burgundian, & I can inweave this fact. Letter 221
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