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How To Use Mingle In A Sentence

  • Parts of all three vases were mingled together and the position of each piece had to be painstakingly documented to aid the reconstruction. Times, Sunday Times
  • Season of the Inundation: Sweet, black silt mingled with holy myrrh, melilot, hyssop, spikenard, balsam, cedar, and a hint of melting snow from the Abyssinian hills. Thor's Day
  • I moved back to the window and stared again at the muddled urban view where the new intermingled with the old. ABSOLUTE TRUTHS
  • I never mingle with the crowds that are being buncoed [sic] in the big department stores of Los Angeles.
  • No whimper, nor sound, nor sign of fear, came from Jerry — only choking growls of ferociousness, intermingled with snarls of anger, and a belligerent up-clawing of hind-legs. CHAPTER XVI
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  • The flavours intermingle to produce a very unusual taste.
  • The words heard by the party upon the staircase were the Frenchman's exclamations of horror and affright, commingled with the fiendish jabberings of the brute.
  • Intermingled with the Euphorbia scrub is a Zizyphus scrub that is characterized by Zizyphus nummularia with Acacia leucocephala, Acacia senegal, Anogeissus pendula, and Dicrostachys cinerea. Northwestern thorn scrub forests
  • Old and new lie next to one another, mixed and intermingled; the ancient is about to pass away, while the modern is geared for eternity, or at least for a kalpa which seems to us eternal.
  • It is one of the oldest pubs in the country and a favourite haunt of the rich and famous who mingle with the locals over a pint - or a royal gin and tonic.
  • The work, epic in its tendencies, belongs to the category of burlesque compositions in macaronic verse (that is in a jargon, made up of Latin words mingled with Italian words, given a Latin aspect), which had already been inaugurated by Tifi Odasi in his "Macaronea", and which, in a measure, marks a continuance of the goliardic traditions of the Middle Ages. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 6: Fathers of the Church-Gregory XI
  • Round the body of the trees, planted some at their root, and some upon the different parts of the trunk, crept the withy, the snakeweed, the ivy, and the hop, and intermingled with them the jessamine and the honeysuckle, in the most unbounded profusion. Imogen A Pastoral Romance
  • Tears mingled with the blood from the cut on her face.
  • As Tunisians flooded Lampedusa earlier this month, Italian Interior Minister Roberto Maroni, of the anti-immigrant Northern League, stoked fears that terrorists and al-Qaida supporters could have mingled among what he described as a "biblical exodus" of migrants. The Seattle Times
  • She cried, tears coursing down her cheeks, mingled with the rain.
  • The yellow and the lavender intermingled, one color coming in and out of the other.
  • If you want to mingle with celebs and people who think they are all that, then I guess this is the place to be.
  • A bright hue mingled with red and white gives the colour called auburn (Greek). Timaeus
  • Livy (XXXII 22 1) has a _murmur_ of mingled praise and dissent following a speech: '_murmur_ ortum aliorum cum adsensu, aliorum inclementer adsentientes increpantium'. The Last Poems of Ovid
  • The laughter on the boats mingled with that on shore, adding to the jubilation on National Day.
  • All was coloured with admiration of his beauty and grace, and mingled with boundless pity for their sad overclouding and defeature! Thomas Wingfold, Curate
  • The laughter on the boats mingled with that on shore, adding to the jubilation on National Day.
  • Her tears began to intermingle with the steam and perspiration; her hair hung in a tangled mop of sweat on her brow. INSIDERS
  • Lotuses their heads uprear from the pure wave, and charm the view with mingled tints of red and blue.
  • The joys of return and reunion with the homeland thus intermingle with a pervasive and insurmountable feeling of loss.
  • Glamorous guests mingle at the bar while jazz noodles in the background. Times, Sunday Times
  • There is no ebb and flow in his metre more than on the shores of the Adriatic, but wave follows wave with equable gainings and recessions, the one sliding back in fluent music to be mingled with and carried forward by the next. Among My Books Second Series
  • A country festival had brought together thousands of people; they pressed about the Emperor, who had mingled with the throng, with ringing shouts of "eljen" [_vive_]; they danced the csardas, waltzed, sang, played music, climbed into the trees, and crowded the court. Library of the World's Best Literature, Ancient and Modern — Volume 5
  • He's developed this captivating narrative voice that mingles his own sharp commentary with Peter's mock-heroic despair. Michael Cunningham's "By Nightfall," reviewed by Ron Charles
  • It also provided a social setting where the sixth graders could mingle without the pressures of a party or dance, which can be awkward for this age group.
  • 20th-century period pastiches, mingled with spikier, modern writing. Times, Sunday Times
  • Or a place in which the fanciful is allowed to commingle with reality. Words, words | clusterflock
  • Huts, fences and palisades are often fashioned from saplings and shoots, and basketry is thus commingled with comforting notions of home, security and comfort.
  • The violence of the past-specifically, the dreaded practice of necklacing, which mingled the smell of rubber with the ‘sickly stench of roasting human flesh’ has been eliminated.
  • She spoke the rude French of the fishing villages, where the language lives chiefly as a baragouin, mingled often with words and forms belonging to many other tongues. Chita: a Memory of Last Island
  • A smashed pumpkin mingled with the leaves, its guts strewn about the street.
  • Police officers in plain clothes were to mingle with the audience. Times, Sunday Times
  • The exposure and _depluming_ (to borrow a good word from the fine old rhetorician, Fuller,) of the leading 'humbugs' of the age -- _that_ was announced as the regular business of the journal: and the only question which remained to be settled was, the more or less of the degree; and also one other question, even more interesting still, viz. -- whether personal abuse were intermingled with literary. The Uncollected Writings of Thomas de Quincey, Vol. 2 With a Preface and Annotations by James Hogg
  • She also said she did not want him to "intermingle" with members of the jury panel. Ajc.com - News
  • Substantial, wholesome, and clean -- though generated by a wet, helpless creature having no personal charms, and which, having passed the phase of life in which it enjoyed the gift of locomotion, has become a plant-like fixture to one spot -- the gas mingles with other diffusions of the reef, recalling villanous salt-petre and sheepdips and brimstone and treacle to the stimulation of the mental faculties generally. My Tropic Isle
  • In some areas, polymorphonuclear leukocytes and eosinophils were intermingled with the small lymphocytes.
  • These last two poems met to mingle in the emotions that poetized these masterpieces.
  • The scent of bougainvillea mingles delicately with the aroma of cannelloni.
  • Her beautiful hands held a cup to the lips of the stranger; while her long hair, escaped from its bands, fell in jetty ringlets, and mingled with his silver locks. The Scottish Chiefs
  • Fantasy and reality have always intermingled in Lancaster's works.
  • Tears mingled with the blood from the cut on her face.
  • Not trying to demonize him or - as some have done - poeticize him, he gives us a common but not unduly vulgar man, with brightness and obtuseness intermingled.
  • “The Arab al-Arabá” (or al — Aribah, or al-Urubíyat) are the autochthones, prehistoric, proto-historic and extinct tribes; for instance, a few of the Adites who being at Meccah escaped the destruction of their wicked nation, but mingled with other classes. The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • And when they were come unto a place called Golgotha, that is to say, a place of a skull, They gave Him Vinegar to drink mingled with gall: and when He had tasted thereof, He would not drink.
  • The brigadier was a thick-set, soldierly looking man, fit as a fiddle in spite of the grey hairs which mingled with his brown moustache, and his eyes lit up as he saw his two sons still safe and well. With Haig on the Somme
  • One man, with a semi-automatic rifle strapped to his back and a pistol in his holster, mingled with supporters of Obama's healthcare reforms.
  • For those who love to mingle with the young and the old alike and serve with a smile, this is a good opening.
  • Today, he said, the most popular places for people to meet or mingle at AvalonBay's various suburban complexes around the state are at the dog runs, which offer benches for the humans - or else the outdoor "cucina" cooking areas and rooftop decks. NYT > Home Page
  • The presence of North Vietnamese Army regulars intermingled with the Viet Cong was becoming more and more evident.
  • Thick stands of wild rye grass mingled with yellow coneflower in the new territory.
  • If a processor or grinder has records demonstrating that products were produced using less than 100% of recalled Westland meat for the meat component, then there is no need ... to retrieve that 'commingled' product," the memo said. Beef Industry Presses
  • Some use "commingled" recycling because it is cheaper. Telegraph.co.uk: news business sport the Daily Telegraph newspaper Sunday Telegraph
  • Outside the train, the concert footage is mingled with modern-day interviews, much of them regarding the political perplexities at the time.
  • Pietro dismissed their vettura, and together they walked down the principal promenade to the shopping center where they mingled with the endless crowds of pedestrians and looked into the windows of the gay little shops that made Andrea think of Venice. Chico: the Story of a Homing Pigeon
  • For Bulgarians, it's the chance to practice delivering lines not in your native tongue - and to mingle with drama enthusiasts from other lands.
  • And without further parley, followed by his soldiers, he retired into the casemate, leaving Captain Servadac gnawing his mustache with mingled rage and mortification. Off on a Comet
  • In contrast, in societies that allow the two sexes to intermingle freely, there are two main problems.
  • That such cosmopolitan urbanity both exists in Croatia and mingles freely with the country's pastoral charm does not surprise Croatians; what surprises them is how slow the rest of the world has been to catch on.
  • The colemanite occurs in irregular milky-white layers or nodules, mingled with more or less gypsum. The Economic Aspect of Geology
  • The vulgarization of political science is intermingled with the forfeit of its civic education function.
  • The legal body is the only aristocratic element which can unforcedly mingle with elements natural to democracy and combine with them on comfortable and lasting terms.
  • You belong where the witty apothegms of Lords, the silly moralities of matrons, the blinding high of opium, and the beauty of visual arts mingle to form one convoluted world.
  • We mingled with other parents in the kitchens and communal lounge. Times, Sunday Times
  • When it was time to file out the side-door into the courtway, she would linger at prayers, then slip out another door, and unseen glide up Chartres Street to Canal, and once there, mingle in the throng that filled the wide thoroughfare. The Goodness of St. Rocque and Other Stories
  • Of fear mingled with the high whiff of disinfectants, of chloride and creosote. DREAMS OF INNOCENCE
  • And let the last word quoted here be one of Elizabeth's own, illustrative of her strangely mingled temperament of queenliness and insolence.
  • At first the seeds lay mingled without order; but nous set the unarranged matter into motion, and thereby created out of chaos an orderly world.
  • Wondrous sights seen along the way mixed and mingled with mystic truths discussed afloat a rolling ocean in daily yoga classes with Gurudeva and his swamis.
  • Their analysis too often mingles management jargon, misapplied analogy, moralistic rhetoric, impatience and fear. Times, Sunday Times
  • These annual conventions of IA unions from the Western states are a cavalcade of speeches, workshops, and general bonhommie where union members and officers mingle for 48 hours and strategize about how to put more money into the hands of working stiffs in these difficult economic times. District Twooo
  • A scent came to her nostrils, like the mingled smell of laburnum honey and lobster thermidor.
  • It was Sunday and we mingled happily with the local families enjoying the weekend. Times, Sunday Times
  • I could smell my cousin's perfume mingled with sweat and hear her labored breaths.
  • In Motion's book there is a remarkable photograph of Eva Larkin circa 1970, sitting relaxedly in an armchair over the back of which her son leans, wearing a look of mingled animosity, defensiveness, and desolation; on the reverse of the picture Larkin had written: "Happy As the Day is Long. Homage to Philip Larkin
  • The ethnic populations are so intermingled that there's bound to be conflict.
  • The flowers mingle together to form a blaze of colour.
  • Round her waist they made the loveliest belt of mingled blue and yellow, and all over the upper part of her night-gown, in and out among the pretty white fills which Dorcas herself "goffered," so nicely, they made themselves into fantastic trimmings of every shape and kind; bows, rosettes – I cannot tell you what they did not imitate. The Cuckoo Clock
  • The gasping clouds of my breath mingled with the fog as I followed the spoor, pushing through denuded branches and the winter skeletons of undergrowth.
  • The sugariness of the potato mingled quite comfortably with the fresh shrimp, and overall this was a memorable dish that worked the sweet/salty crossover with style.
  • The guests mingled and chitchatted, sipping gin and tonics and nibbling on little quiches. Woman On the Verge
  • Their reaction, I'd guess, was a touch of awe mingled with the instant lift we all felt the moment we entered this space.
  • I've had the chance to mingle with the crowds and meet far more racegoers than I normally do, which hopefully helps convey the atmosphere to the viewers at home.
  • In Washington from mid-October to early May, long-tailed ducks are usually found in deep salt water, sometimes intermingled with scoters.
  • Agence France-Presse/Getty Images Blood mingled with broken glass on the ground where a booby-trapped motorcycle exploded in Sadr City. Explosions Across Baghdad
  • Things she has read or been told, mingle with dreams, which will go on surfacing, but can never be unravelled. SEA MUSIC
  • There was relief mingled with pride in a South Lakeland village this week as its public toilet was reopened thanks to people power.
  • People from what would be considered opposite ends of the social spectrum mingle openly.
  • When it is mingled with black bile and dispersed about the courses of the head, which are the divinest part of us, the attack if coming on in sleep, is not so severe; but when assailing those who are awake it is hard to be got rid of, and being an affection of a sacred part, is most justly called sacred. Timaeus
  • The present sewer is a beautiful sewer; the pure style reigns there; the classical rectilinear alexandrine which, driven out of poetry, appears to have taken refuge in architecture, seems mingled with all the stones of that long, dark and whitish vault; each outlet is an arcade; the Rue de Rivoli serves as pattern even in the sewer. Les Miserables
  • “This rock, which was so extensively employed by the Pueblo Indians for the manufacture of various utensils, has proved to be composed largely of quartz, intermingled with which is a fine, fibrous, radiated substance, the optical properties of which demonstrate it to be fibrolite. Illustrated Catalogue Of The Collections Obtained From The Indians Of New Mexico And Arizona In 1879 Second Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1880-81, Government Printing Office, Washington, 1883, pa
  • Dark fruit aromas of blackberry, black cherry and black plum intermingle with those of earthy tobacco, thyme, mint and subtle spice. New York Cork Club
  • Rich hardwoods of myrtle, blackwood, sassafras and Huon pine mingle with common eucalypts.
  • At that moment, the cudgelling, multiplied by a hundred hands, became zealous, blows with the flat of the sword were mingled with it, it was a perfect storm of whips and clubs; the convicts bent before it, a hideous obedience was evoked by the torture, and all held their peace, darting glances like chained wolves. Les Miserables
  • The sweat of our bodies mingled with spilt Red Stripe and stale poppers, as I realised I was in the greatest place ever in the history of mankind.
  • Annie's touchy pride, mingled with what Vassie frankly called her "impossibleness," made the situation hopeless, for the former quality would not let her efface herself, and the latter prevented her daughter being called upon. Secret Bread
  • Amen! went up to heaven in ratification of the deed, mingled with a few hisses and wrathful exclamations from some who were evidently in a rowdyish state of mind, but who were at once cowed by the popular feeling. Revolution Day
  • And even these are not allowed to pall upon the mental palate, being mingled with anecdotes and short tales, such as the Hermits (iii. 125), with biographical or literary episodes, acroamata, table-talk and analects where humorous Rabelaisian anecdote finds a place; in fact the fabliau or novella. The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • This is a beach where 'textiles' and nudists have mingled quite happily together for years.
  • Just imagine all of the potential mother - in - law jokes and boss jokes that might otherwise intermingle.
  • It was a decade when copious talk of universal human rights mingled abhorrently with the most brazen crimes against humanity.
  • I have again discoursed, and mingled my soul, with friends whose nobility of spirit honored the illustrious stems from which they sprang; but, like the blossomed bough torn from its branch, they are gone, and spread fragrance in my path no more. The Scottish Chiefs
  • I sweat like a racehorse, and very dark thoughts mingled with incapacitating spasms of pain.
  • You need never mingle with your fellow guests - your walled pavilion is its own private domain for inside and outside living.
  • Those tall pillars of mingled lilac, mauve, purple and white flowers rising above square planters are spectacular, as are the matching hanging baskets here and there.
  • Here the initial reflex excitation is closely followed by an ensuing reflex inhibition commingled with and partially counter-acting the concurrent excitation. Sir Charles Sherrington - Nobel Lecture
  • Fact is intermingled with fiction throughout the book.
  • Women wrapped in veils and headscarves and men in long robes mingled in the shops alongside boys and girls in jeans.
  • Herbs such as mint, cilantro and parsley mingle with nemesia and cucumber. BC Bloggers
  • Speaking generally, the most common state of things in these flowers was the occurrence on the throat of the calyx, in the position ordinarily occupied by the stamens, and sometimes mingled with those organs, of twisted, ribbon-like filaments, which bore about the centre one or more pendulous, anatropous ovules on their margins. Vegetable Teratology An Account of the Principal Deviations from the Usual Construction of Plants
  • The atmosphere is friendly as hipsters mingle with young families. The Sun
  • This time the monthly mingle is about lunches for kids and was started by Meeta of What's for Lunch Honey Archive 2009-03-01
  • It was a formal agreement between himself and Richard, signed in their mingled blood on 29 November 1963.
  • What makes this place different is you can mingle with the artists.
  • His mission was to make sure I didn't steal the scene by doing something unfortunate, such as tumbling down the flight of stairs that led from the set's upper level, where most of the supers mingled, to the stars who would be flirting and fighting and dining at the Café Momus below. Bravo, to the Rear Stage
  • While happy to mingle with aristocracy and royalty, he retained pride in his middling origins, claiming that the name Franklin itself echoed the status of his long line of freeholding ancestors.
  • Man and beast mingle. Times, Sunday Times
  • The subjects of these plays were pure fantasy, mingled with themes from wide reading.
  • Contemporary tents and thatched platform huts command amazing views and the earthy colours of nature mingle with contemporary lounge areas. Times, Sunday Times
  • They mingled with guests afterwards but didn't stay for lunch. The Sun
  • The sun was setting, and a gentle southerly breeze, striking against the southern side of the rock, mingled its current with the colder air above; and the vapour was thus condensed: but as the light wreaths of cloud passed over the ridge, and came within the influence of the warmer atmosphere of the northern sloping bank, they were immediately redissolved. Journal of researches into the geology and natural history of the various countries visited by H.M.S. Beagle
  • At the center of it all stands the bar, where pros and enthusiasts could, for a small fee, hang out, mingle, shmooze and drink to their heart's content from 11 AM-9 PM. Tony Sachs: Bleary-Eyed Reflections On The Manhattan Cocktail Classic
  • The native hunter with me gazed in mingled fear and amazement. Boing Boing: December 3, 2006 - December 9, 2006 Archives
  • The crowds at this year's Puck Fair seemed bigger than usual as locals mingled with tourists and returned emigrants for one of the oldest and most colourful pageants in the country.
  • There are groups of rounded or vesiculose cells intermingled with thread-like cells in the substance of the cap. Studies of American Fungi. Mushrooms, Edible, Poisonous, etc.
  • He ‘distained to mingle in the intrigues of court life’ and found his chief occupation in the formation of his collection.
  • I never got into the new stuff, the GF was a Storyteller in the Cam, and had bought me a membership to try and get me to try the LARP of the new world. while the settings commingle better they feel stale to me, and I never could get into them White Wolf – Dead Yet? « Geek Related
  • Masses of colourful rhododendrons mingle with the sweet scented yellow azaleas in early summer.
  • Her beautiful slender figure grew smaller and smaller till she mingled with the thin dry trees in the forest. Modern Literatures of the Non-Western World: Where the Waters Are Born
  • Afterward he and Corinne went to the White House for lunch and mingled with the high and mighty of official Washington.
  • Her excitement was mingled with a slight feeling of fear.
  • She longed to please, Davide noticed with sympathy commingled with impatience.
  • The two parties were inevitably required to commingle. Times, Sunday Times
  • I think I'll commingle some of these blue flowers with the pink ones.
  • Having but an indifferent opinion of books ushered into existence by such charlatanical manoeuvres, we thought no more of Omoo, until, musing the other day over our matutinal hyson, the volume itself was laid before us, and we suddenly found ourselves in the entertaining society of Marquesan Melville, the phoenix of modern voyagers, sprung, it would seem, from the mingled ashes of Captain Cook and Robin Crusoe. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 61, No. 380, June, 1847
  • Granada, in the heart of their great conquest; and it is a most beautiful church, of a mingled Saracenic plateresque Gothic, as the guide-books remind me, and extravagantly baroque as I myself found it. Familiar Spanish Travels
  • The rank, steaming smell of vomit mingled with the tangy stink of blood, sweat, and fear.
  • Art collector, polo player and film producer Peter Brant gives me a ride to the 68th Venice Film Festival to mingle with Hollywood glitterati. Peggy Siegal: To Venice With Love
  • The three storeyed red and white bawdy houses of Upper Queen Street extended into Grey Street, and mingled happily with Chinese grocery shops, masonic clubs, and pakapoo saloons.
  • The light and the dark intermingle to form the pattern of redemption and salvation.
  • The "daemonic" was also responsible for the mingled attraction that was exerted over me at this point by a young foreign student, and for the intercourse which ensued between us. Recollections of My Childhood and Youth
  • Dance music from a nearby club mingles with the soft swoosh of water flowing over one of the Vltava's many dams.
  • The indistinct noise of the city floated in, the dolorous, snuffling air of an accordeon, the mooing of cows could be heard; somebody's soles were scraping dryly and a ferruled cane rapped resoundingly on the flags of the pavement; lazily and irregularly the wheels of a cabman's victoria, rolling at a pace through Yama, would rumble by, and all these sounds mingled with a beauty and softness in the pensive drowsiness of the evening. Yama: the pit
  • So she brought me a tankard of red gold, set with pearls and gems of price, full of water mingled with virgin musk and covered with a napkin of green silk, and I addressed myself to drink and was long about my drinking, for I stole glances at her the while, till I could prolong my stay no longer. The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • Rhythmic and precise, the keyboards, guitars and drums mingle like city traffic, intersecting sharply at right angles.
  • The result is that dwindling numbers of children are bussed to distant schools where they mingle with others who live many miles away.
  • Over the rolling, variegated hills, where virulent yellow rape seed mingles with brown arable land and verdant fruit farms, a grey, murky pallor is cast.
  • I took it, but my relief was mingled with insensible annoyance at the trifling penalty.
  • I think I'll mingle some of these red flowers with the pink ones.
  • From the meadows the rowen, tossed in long loose windrows, sent into their car a sad autumnal fragrance which mingled with the tobacco smoke, when two fat smokers emerged into the narrow corridor outside their compartments and tried to pass each other. Complete March Family Trilogy
  • These sturdy wooden boats mingle picturesquely alongside the quay, while they are relieved of their morning's catch or stocked with sacks of spices.
  • The smell of the sea mingled with the faint scent of the grass.
  • At Wasps, the players of both sides happily mingled with spectators in the spring sunshine. Times, Sunday Times
  • Mingled with the desire that raged within him like an inferno was a cold, bitter anger stemming from the knowledge that he would be neither the first nor the last man to possess her. MEMORY’S EMBRACE
  • Parts of all three vases were mingled together and the position of each piece had to be painstakingly documented to aid the reconstruction. Times, Sunday Times
  • And these set forth like the blast of violent winds, that rushes earthward beneath the thunder of Zeus, and with marvellous din doth mingle with the salt sea, and therein are many swelling waves of the loud roaring sea, arched over and white with foam, some vanward, others in the rear; even so the Trojans arrayed in van and rear and shining with bronze, followed after their leaders. The Iliad
  • Inspiration, -- _Woe unto him that giveth his neighbour drink, that puttest thy bottle to him, and makest him drunken also_: and again -- _Woe unto them that are mighty to drink wine, and men of strength to mingle strong drink_. Advice to a Young Man upon First Going to Oxford In Ten Letters, From an Uncle to His Nephew
  • Imperceptibly the yellow balloon and the yellow copepod mingle with the music in my mind, the balloon representing the globe on which copepods play such a prominent ecological role.
  • We there found some fine specimens of blue carbonated copper mingled with sulphate of barytes and quartz; but we could not ourselves judge whether the ore contained any argentiferous fahlerz, and whether it occurred in a stratum, or, as the apothecary who was our guide asserted, in real veins. Travels to the Equinoctial Regions of America
  • The company, which is more than a decade old, intermingles classical ballet with elements of traditional Chinese dance.
  • A Caucasian Chalk Circle for our own age, it begins with the howl of death mingled with dread despair and ends with an act of terrible tenderness.
  • With this road-metal are mingled short strips of raphia, or palm-fibre, flexible ribbons, easily bent. The Life of the Spider
  • Yet while complications ensue in satirical subplots in which love and money commingle, hilarity proves only sporadic. Times, Sunday Times
  • On Wednesday, the day after my ejection from the range, I mingled with the local TV people and newspaper beat writers.
  • Luke the hunter ... Folly felt a thrill of anticipation, mingled with fear.
  • For women, one of the rules is that she must not mingle with women she does not know.
  • Season of the Inundation: Sweet, black silt mingled with holy myrrh, melilot, hyssop, spikenard, balsam, cedar, and a hint of melting snow from the Abyssinian hills. Thor's Day
  • Fashionable hipsters and art patrons mingled in the boxy gallery tucked in New York's chic Chelsea district.
  • So do leaders at Project Creation in Mount Juliet, Tenn., who would need to raise about $1 million to assemble 30 to 50 pterodactyl and brachiosaur replicas to mingle with live chickens and goats. Studio execs: dumb white men
  • Yet while complications ensue in satirical subplots in which love and money commingle, hilarity proves only sporadic. Times, Sunday Times
  • Hardware and software - metal and light and sound - mingled in endlessly surprising ways (though the projections and audio ran on a repeating loop).
  • He explored ever-more-farfetched scenarios, including the possibility that my cell signal "intermingled" with the plane's communications. Archive 2008-08-01
  • Salt and sugar intermingle with each other.
  • As the day progressed, the groups were intermixed to give everyone an opportunity to meet and mingle.
  • She mingled with the crowds of young, untidy foreigners who lounged around the base of the statue in Piccadilly Circus.
  • Parts of all three vases were mingled together and the position of each piece had to be painstakingly documented to aid the reconstruction. Times, Sunday Times
  • The two parties were inevitably required to commingle. Times, Sunday Times
  • He stretched his bow, loosed the arrow, and was rewarded by a gasp and a groan strangely commingled. CHAPTER XVIII
  • Their laughters are mingled with the roaring sound of the mighty waves, which are much too eager to devour their easy preys.
  • The more he intermingles mordacious taunts with earnest reflections on the feelings of a man suffocated by a less than satisfying matrimony, the harder it is to take him seriously.
  • ‘Yes,’ he agreed, his tone quiet and unemphatic, and regarded her with what seemed to be mingled perplexity and embarrassment.
  • Throughout his career, Shakespeare has brought onstage fairies, gliosis, demons, and monsters to mingle with his more recognizably human characters. Shakespeare
  • Colours mingled unco fine.
  • After less than a hundred yards they mingle with another stream , the mill hands from " outside.
  • These migmatite complexes were mingled with the intrusive magmas that provided the heat sources for crustal melting.
  • She is very shy and does not mingle with the children at school.
  • This led Harriet and me to delve into the mountains of newspapers that, mingled with Christmas wrappings, were destined for the recycler.
  • But the spirit of that predatory war which the English carried on against Spain mingled with this scheme of settlement, and on this account, as well as from unacquaintance with a more direct and shorter course to North America, Greenville sailed by the West India Confederate Prisoners at Roanoke Island
  • Exotic scent mingled with the more religious smells of incense, furniture polish and veneration.
  • Garbett's style has flashes of Barry Kitson, intermingled with bits of Jim Calafiore's line quality and Marcos Martin's clean figurework, all of which add up to a seemingly custom-crafted artist for this title and this character. Comic Book Resources
  • Prior to the meal and his after-dinner speech, he will sign copies of the novel and mingle with guests.
  • And then I carefully sipped champagne as I mingled but my stomach kept growling so I went back to put a schmear of cheese torte on a water cracker.
  • This already happens more than it should, and the new health care bill will create more corruption as government and business become even more intermingled than they are. Think Progress » 1967 Flashback: ‘Gov. Romney Would Quit Church For Social Justice’
  • Now the cheers and applause mingled in a single sustained roar.
  • But this was disbelief mingled with dismay, fear or plain bewilderment. Times, Sunday Times
  • He was about to mingle in an unpleasant affair

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