0 past simple and past participle of lace --
1 to add alcohol or drugs to food or drink, often secretly: --
2 to put the lace of a shoe or boot through its holes, or to fasten a shoe or boot by tying a lace --
Capturing not only the nuances within individual thought, but within liberalism itself, he successfully portrays a multi-layered intellectual tradition rich in its complexity and laced with irony.
First, caffeine and tyramine sensitivity are correlated with starvation resistance, possibly indicating that some of the response is due to the avoidance of food laced with these drugs.
Virtually every page is laced with theoretical insights-theory, that is, in the grand sense of social vision or, at least, critical dissections of other people's visions.
Chapter 3 describe how interstellar clouds, laced with organic material, collapse to form planetary systems, and how our own solar system in particular has its current structure.
Indeed, it runs through all the manifestations of reform, often laced with a sense of urgency.
This is because of the flowing prose laced with irresistible titles and sub-titles that have become the trademark of the author.
Much of this detail may be familiar enough - gleaned as it is from standard sources - but the pages are laced with the unanticipated.
Terms such a 'barbaric', 'primitive' and 'uncivilised' laced the forest literature of the period.