0 present participle of intertwine --
1 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.
Hemmed in by the intertwining boughs of the border, the portrait emphasises the solipsistic pleasure of individuated lyric poetry.
Throughout, the intertwining of the political, the social, and the aesthetic is persuasively explored.
Another informant explained his view of the intertwining of lifecourse and housing situations.
They use quasiconformal (or trans-quasiconformal) surgery (called intertwining surgery) to construct intertwinings.
Both novels insist on the separation between spiritual love and physical love while in the same instant indistinguishably intertwining the two.
These results imply that there were in fact two intertwining outbreaks in the same period and region, which could not be epidemiologically distinguished.
Embeddedness refers to the intertwining of processes and rules that creates added value for the processes.
The primary aim of this paper is to analyze their conceptualizations of home and the intertwining of their various migration patterns.