0 to twist or be twisted together, or to be connected so as to be difficult to separate: --
The trees' branches intertwined to form a dark roof over the path.
The town's prosperity is inextricably intertwined with the fortunes of the factory.
Our divergent realities are in fact closely intertwined in ways that elude categorical explanation.
Individual interests are intertwined with family interests,37 and it is often impossible to separate the two.
Moreover, these aspects of modernity were inextricably intertwined with the growth of self-interest, individualism, and ambition.
It is characterized by curving, organic lines, intertwining vines of flowers and leaves, and the use where possible of natural materials.
Indeed, their lifestyles, while being intertwined, are also partly autonomous of each other.
Eventually, the two voices intertwine more loosely in overlapping solo statements.
When people describe themselves and what is important to them, these aspects are commonly intertwined in their descriptions.
Science is thereby conceptually embedded in material productive process such that physical and economic measurement are intertwined.