entwined in English

verb
1
wind or twist together; interweave.
they lay entwined in each other's arms

Use "entwined" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "entwined" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "entwined", or refer to the context using the word "entwined" in the English Dictionary.

1. They walked together with their arms entwined.

2. " Your affinities will be closely entwined. "

3. The balcony was entwined with roses.

4. The civil and criminal actions are inextricably entwined.

5. The fates of both countries seem somehow entwined.

6. A creeper was entwined ( a ) round [ about ] the pillar.

7. Our fates are really entwined, don't you think?

8. Like coils of serpents, both of your fates are entwined.

9. Cobras are constantly depicted entwined in a double helix.

10. 21 Our views of leadership are entwined with ideas of heroism.

11. They gazed at each other, their legs entwined under the table.

12. Feeding and environment Many elements of marine aquarium care are interdependent and inexorably entwined.

13. Still entwined, the puppets threshed violently against each other as if overcome with concupiscence.

14. Indeed, the civil and the sacred were so entwined that they were at times indistinguishable.

15. A Caduceus is a wand entwined by two snakes and topped by wings or a winged helmet

16. 28 Feeding and environment Many elements of marine aquarium care are interdependent and inexorably entwined.

17. * Issues of trade policy should not be allowed to become entwined with competition issues when scrutinizing transactions.

18. * Issues of trade policy should not be allowed to become entwined with competition issues when scrutinizing transactions

19. It was raven black and the hair was entwined with a slim rope of gold thread and opals.

20. The pale woman, bosom exposed, is entwined with a dark man wearing a sullen expression and a skull cap.

21. Her nightgown had ridden up around her waist, and she enjoyed feeling his hard, muscular legs entwined around hers.

22. Each of our Animas offerings — intensives, quests, yearlong immersions, wilderness pilgrimages, and trainings — is entwined with each of the others

23. 25 The pale woman, bosom exposed, is entwined with a dark man wearing a sullen expression and a skull cap.

24. 24 In an attempt to get data from this natural laboratory, particle physics has become ever more entwined with cosmology.

25. 28 From the top it looked like an elaborate dance, four arms entwined, four legs shuffling around and between each other.

26. The Bellman cried, As he landed his crew with care; Supporting each man on the top of the tide By a finger entwined in his hair

27. Companionate love - Feelings of affection , caring and commitment towards close friends and people with whom our lives are deeply entwined; intimacy and commitment without passion .

28. Frankincense and Benjoin are expertly entwined in delicious balance, sweetened slightly by a kind of vanillic amber accord that smoulders away and helps mitigate the austerity of the incense.

29. Recent work shows that deficit discourse surrounding Aboriginality is intricately entwined within and across different sites of representation, policy and expression, and is active both within and outside Indigenous Australia

30. Aspidistra do NOT like root root disturbance, but I had not choice but to cut away some to the roots that were entwined with the disintegrating pot and packing peanuts

31. Bellyboarding might just be the simplest way to enjoy waveriding on a piece of wood and it’s deeply entwined in the history of British surfing, which is why we love it

32. This Cuddling no-no happens when you and your boyfriend are so entwined that it would take an hour just to find out where you've put your left leg or right hand

33. Aragonite is a carbonated metamorphous gemstone naturally found in stalactites or around natural hot springs. This form of Aragonite is often called floss ferri (“iron flowers”), due to its thin, entwined branch-like crystal formations

34. The Rod of Asclepius (or Staff of Asclepius) is an ancient Greek symbol that has become an internationally recognized symbol of medicine.It depicts a serpent entwined around a staff that is traditionally a knotty tree limb

35. Bonnier ZAFFRE Bonnier Zaffre is a division of Bonnier Publishing, which encompasses the children’s imprints Hot Key Books and Piccadilly Press and adult fiction imprints Zaffre, Twenty7 and Totally Entwined Group (Totally Bound Publishing and Pride Publishing).

36. Absinthe has gained a romantic, nearly mythological reputation over the years. La Fée Verte —the Green Fairy as it is sometimes known—is entwined with stories of writers, artists and bohemians, especially those of the belle epoque and Roaring Twenties.

37. Amidstream the stillness— and through this gap, beads of air simmer on the verge, and are pulled away or escape into the frozen air in a mist that rises skyward, entwined with the sound of the stream’s constant weaving

38. The Bacardi Rum Factory (Casa Bacardi) is entwined with the history of the Caribbean itself, and the factory’s new visitor center traces the company’s early roots as a small distillery in Cuba through American Prohibition, the Cuban Revolution, and beyond

39. How the Poor Became Black The Racialization of American Poverty in the Mass Media martin gilens Race and poverty are now so closely entwined that it is hard to believe there was a time when discussions of American poverty neglected blacks altogether

40. Originally the Caduceus was a rod or olive branch ending in two shoots and decorated with garlands or ribbons. Later the garlands were interpreted as two snakes entwined in opposite directions with their heads facing; and a pair of wings, in token of Hermes’ speed, was attached to the staff above the snakes.

41. In the marriage procession of Henry Tudor and Elizabeth York, says an agreeable writer each partizan of Lancaster gave his hand to a lady of the York party, holding a bouquet of two roses, der and white entwined; and at the birth of Prince Henry, the Amourists composed a rose of two colours (the leaves alternating red and white), as an

42. In the marriage procession of Henry Tudor and Elizabeth York, says an agreeable writer each partizan of Lancaster gave his hand to a lady of the York party, holding a bouquet of two roses, der and white entwined; and at the birth of Prince Henry, the Amourists composed a rose of two colours (the leaves alternating red and white), as an

43. In Greek mythology, the Rod of Asclepius (Greek: Ράβδος του Ασκληπιού, Rábdos tou Asklipioú, sometimes also spelled Asklepios), also known as the Staff of Aesculapius and as the asklepian, is a serpent-entwined rod wielded by the Greek god Asclepius, a deity associated with healing and medicine.The symbol has continued to be used in modern times, where it is associated with