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interlace
[ in-ter-leys, in-ter-leys ]
verb (used without object)
- to cross one another, typically passing alternately over and under, as if woven together; intertwine:
Their hands interlaced.
verb (used with object)
- to unite or arrange (threads, strips, parts, branches, etc.) so as to intercross one another, passing alternately over and under; intertwine.
- to mingle; blend.
- to diversify, as with threads woven in.
- to intersperse; intermingle:
She interlaced her lecture on Schubert with some of his songs.
interlace
/ ˌɪntəˈleɪs; ˌɪntəˈleɪsɪdlɪ /
verb
- to join together (patterns, fingers, etc) by crossing, as if woven; intertwine
- tr to mingle or blend in an intricate way
- trusually foll bywith to change the pattern of; diversify; intersperse
to interlace a speech with humour
Derived Forms
- interlacedly, adverb
- ˌinterˈlacement, noun
Other Words From
- in·ter·lac·ed·ly [in-ter-, ley, -sid-lee], adverb
- inter·lacement noun
- unin·ter·laced adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of interlace1
Example Sentences
At least in the context she was talking about, outside of old disposable camera photographs, I had no clue who these people really were, despite their lives’ obvious interlacing with my own.
Clarissa Tossin takes viewers on a journey from the Amazon to outer space to reveal how technology is interlaced with colonialism.
Keeping its legacy alive and interlaced with the community was another — and, for Historic Seattle, relatively new, humbling territory.
Besides interlacing environmental, scientific and social themes that whirl through zealotry and nihilism, it’s also a first-contact scenario that forces a reckoning.
While some propaganda is mendacious, the most effective propaganda will interlace carefully selected verifiable facts with emotional appeals.
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