0 to twist together or combine two or more things so that they cannot be separated easily:
She has created an intriguing story by skilfully interweaving fictional and historical events.
1 to put together or combine two or more things so that they cannot be separated easily:
The author skillfully interweaves fiction and history in her novel.
The problem of how to interweave the primordial+particularistic orientations with the universalistic constituted in all these civilizations a potential point of contention.
In this respect, these masculinities interweave men's social power with a range of both dominant and subordinate cultural representations.
The book, however, is slow at interweaving these threads and in getting to its main points about modernity.
Therefore, while in traditional music, sound-making and the perception of sound are interwoven, in electroacoustic music they are often not connected.
The text is instead packed with information as well as being interwoven with relevant anecdotes.
The 1838 report, for example, deftly interweaves statistical information, anecdote, and prescription.
Experiential ageing is a complex process intricately interwoven with the totality of life.
The issues of language and religion, therefore, were interwoven to the degree that a threat to one was a threat to the other.