Synonyms for interlace
Grammar : Verb |
Spell : in-ter-leys, in-ter-leys |
Phonetic Transcription : ˌɪn tərˈleɪs, ˈɪn tərˌleɪs |
Définition of interlace
Origin :- late 14c., from Middle French entrelacer, from entre- (see entre-) + lacer (see lace). Television sense is from 1927. Related: Interlaced; interlacing. The noun is 1904, from the verb.
- verb intertwine
- It made her interlace her fingers with nervous anxiety, but it set a fire in her eyes.
- Extract from : « Way of the Lawless » by Max Brand
- To interlace these is the crowning achievement of political science.
- Extract from : « Statesman » by Plato
- To interlace a story with glass and with rope with color and roam.
- Extract from : « Geography and Plays » by Gertrude Stein
- They interpenetrate, interlace, correspond with and embrace each other.
- Extract from : « Delsarte System of Oratory » by Various
- Note the large fibers in the ligament, which branch and interlace.
- Extract from : « A Practical Physiology » by Albert F. Blaisdell
- Arrange them nicely so that they interlace properly and are evenly applied.
- Extract from : « Hunting with the Bow and Arrow » by Saxton Pope
- They have stout stems which twist and turn, interlace and knot themselves together into a tangled mass.
- Extract from : « Rubber » by Edith A. Browne
- One must act,—must be always stirring; life is a series of movements, the lines of which interlace.
- Extract from : « Philosophic Nights In Paris » by Remy De Gourmont
- Helis were rising from the factory lots, to interlace with incoming ships before joining with the great stream headed south.
- Extract from : « Final Weapon » by Everett B. Cole
- But regions which interlace so that in reality the word becomes a good deal of a misnomer.
- Extract from : « Our Railroads To-Morrow » by Edward Hungerford
Antonyms for interlace
Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019