0 to twist something together or around something: --
1 to twist together or around something: --
fig. In the old days, moviemaking was entwined with political and social life.
The old-fashioned porch was entwined with many creeping plants.
All these local evolutions are considered to occur simultaneously, entwined in a parallel (global) step.
As if meshed in a mutually dependent embrace, both these arms of government were intimately entwined with the political and economic interests of the state.
In the scientific use of computer simulation, an abstract model is manipulated through a digital machine, entwining the epistemic and the technical inextricably together.
Such human minutiae enrich and entwine our lives and form a part of their intrinsic worth.
In fact, the distinction between 'politics' and 'economics' is really misleading, because 'economics' are a political construct, and politics are inextricably entwined with economic factors.
Electronic music culture is at least in conversation, if not inextricably entwined, with the legacy of modernist notions of authorship and authenticity.
The reasons for this are not fully transparent, but they certainly lie entwined with other historical threads.
He missed how closely these issues were entwined.