intertwine

(redirected from intertwinement)
Also found in: Dictionary, Idioms.
Graphic Thesaurus  🔍
Display ON
Animation ON
Legend
Synonym
Antonym
Related
  • verb

Synonyms for intertwine

Collins Thesaurus of the English Language – Complete and Unabridged 2nd Edition. 2002 © HarperCollins Publishers 1995, 2002

Synonyms for intertwine

make lacework by knotting or looping

make a loop in

Synonyms

Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
For over fifteen years, Cassils's work in performance, installation, and video has tackled the complicated politics of transgender visibility and its intertwinement with the politics of form.
The automobile industry within the EU is utterly dependent on the free movement of goods, with no two EU countries more invested in that intertwinement than Germany and the UK.
I interpret this inextricable intertwinement of the public juridical state of exception and the clandestine non-juridical self-exemption that was introduced into Western history by the French Revolution as a traumatic constellation that nurtures modern literary works.
In the second chapter he outlines the intertwinement between the international and domestic legal orders from the point of view of the Charter as a source of public international and EU law.
In essence, family influence produces an intertwinement of factors that shapes the firm's goals, strategies, and structure (Chrisman, Chua, & Sharma, 2005; Chua, Chrisman, & Sharma, 1999).
Perhaps the most striking--and challenging--section in the book is his description of how Jewish practices of nonpropitiatory sacrifices embodied the intertwinement of work and worship.
An acknowledgment of the gendered construction of the nation is similarly absent in the influential conceptualisations of the primordialists, such as Edward Shils (1957), Clifford Geertz (1997) and Pierre van den Berghe (1979), who theorise the nation as a continuation or extension of kinship relations and family systems, which misses the complex and intricate intertwinement of gender with projects of nation-building.
This causes intertwinement of the newly replicated DNA double helices, forming precatenanes [197].
Because of a close intertwinement of theory and method in discourse analysis (Winther-Jorgensen & Phillips, 2010), analytical categories attended to in the theoretical section, in a sense, define the methodological framework per se.
"There is no embarrassment in calling yourself Welsh and British - quite the contrary; it is something we should cherish given the deep intertwinement of our rich histories."
By studying the historical intertwinement of the region's musical traditions "I Am Sick But I Am Alive" reflects on the sheer violence exerted by borders on the one hand, and their perpetual incapacity to curb waves of sound and human migration.