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.
These two overlapping, interweaving processes are the literal and the subtextual.
The percussive element is strongly interwoven with the violoncello timbre as shown in figure 8 (bars 104-9).
A chronological treatment from 1740-1910 is interwoven with a triple thematic progression.
The difficulties of interweaving clinical and managerial agendas have been noted by other studies (7).
Their stories are interwoven with detailed discussion of the ageing process and of specific aspects of health-care provision, such as health insurance, ' rationing ' and pharmaceuticals.
Overall, the analyses are extremely careful and interweave developmental data and grammatical theory in a most elegant way.
As a result of these interweaving elements, the study of gender is a complex combination of separate, but interconnected issues.
The issues of language and religion, therefore, were interwoven to the degree that a threat to one was a threat to the other.