Concept cluster: Change > Interweaving or intertwining
adj
(of rivers, etc) Joined or run together, ramified, interconnected.
v
(engineering, computing) To provide a baseline for measurement.
v
To bury together; inter.
adj
(biology) Arched inward so that the points meet; brought close together or in close contact; converging.
v
(obsolete, transitive) To weave together; to form by interweaving.
v
(transitive) To weave together.
v
To produce, or undergo deintercalation.
v
(transitive) To convert from an interleaved format.
v
(transitive, intransitive) To format (a document) so that every other line is left blank, leaving sufficient whitespace for annotation (e.g. a teacher's corrections).
v
Obsolete form of interlace. [(transitive) To cross one with another.]
v
(transitive or intransitive) To overlap in a regular pattern.
v
(intransitive) To intercommunicate; to interjoin.
n
(nonce word) The interweaving of branches of trees.
adj
between (adjacent) beacons (in any of various contexts)
v
(geology) To interleave between other beds or strata having different characteristics
v
To insert anything somewhere (especially between other things), such as an affix into a word. (Compare interpolate.)
n
That which intercalates
v
To circulate between multiple things
v
To classify individual items into multiple categories.
v
To cross back over one another
v
(cinematography) To alternate between scenes from one sequence and scenes from another film sequence, often with the sequences to be perceived as simultaneous.
n
An act or instance of something being intercut.
n
(obsolete, computing) The interval during which the operation of a punched card device was halted to allow time for processing of card contents
v
(transitive) To intersperse.
v
(intransitive) To become folded or locked together, like the fingers of a folded hand.
n
The layout of electronic components that resembles such an interlinking
v
(intransitive) To eat with one another; used especially of people of different castes.
n
(construction) An intertie.
v
(intransitive, physics) (of waves) To be correlated with each other when overlapped or superposed.
v
(transitive) To file (something) between or among existing entries.
v
(geology) To interpenetrate in long alternating strips like clasped fingers.
v
(linguistic morphology, transitive) To insert (an interfix) between two morphemes.
v
(intransitive) To flow between.
v
(obsolete) To interleave.
v
(transitive) To graft each upon the other.
v
(mathematics) To interconnect two sets.
v
(intransitive) To cross one another as if woven together; to intertwine; to blend intricately.
n
interlayering
v
(transitive) To arrange in alternating laminae or layers.
v
(transitive, intransitive) To overlap mutually, so that each partially covers the other.
v
(obsolete) To elapse (between two events).
n
Synonym of interlarding
n
The process by which something is interlarded.
v
(transitive) To insert layers of a different material between.
v
(transitive) To layer among each other; to produce alternating layers of.
v
Same as interleave
v
(transitive) To insert (pages, which are normally blank) between the pages of a book.
n
(computing) A program or algorithm that interleaves.
v
(transitive) To lie between.
v
To write or insert between lines already written or printed, as for addition or correction.
v
(linguistics, transitive) To mark up (text) with interlinear notation.
v
(transitive) To insert between the lines of a document.
v
(transitive) To list on more than one stock exchange.
v
To locate between others; to intercalate
v
To interlace.
v
(transitive) To provide with an interlude.
adj
Having interludes.
v
To mat together.
v
(intransitive) To mesh between one another.
v
(obsolete) To intersect or penetrate with mines.
n
A device that controls the intermittent flow of a fluid.
v
(biology) To have the character of, or to lie between, two distinct groups.
v
(transitive, intransitive) To insert or include between the pages of another document; to interleave.
v
(rare, obsolete) To place pales between or among; to separate with pales.
v
To place between or among.
v
To plait together; to interweave or intertwine
v
(transitive, intransitive) To introduce (something) between other things; especially to insert (possibly spurious) words into a text.
v
(transitive) To insert something (or oneself) between other things.
v
To add punctuation between words or phrases
v
(intransitive) To rhyme with each other.
v
(transitive, intransitive) To cut into or between; to cut or cross mutually; to divide into parts.
v
(obsolete, transitive) To put in between other things; to insert.
v
To set between or among.
v
(transitive) To sow or seed (an area) with things spaced out between other things.
v
To appear at intervals within
v
(transitive) To scatter or insert something into or among other things.
v
(transitive) To splice between; to intercut (e.g. a scene in a film).
v
(transitive) To sprinkle between.
adj
Provided with interstices; situated at intervals.
v
To put between classes of society; to compose of multiple groups of people with similar social, cultural, or economic status.
v
(obsolete) To intertwine; to weave or bind together.
n
The act of interweaving, or the state of being interwoven.
v
(intransitive) To move alternately on either side of people or objects; to weave in and out.
v
(geology, of strata) To interlock.
adj
(electrical engineering) Between turns of a winding.
v
(intransitive, informal, computing, rare) To interconnect or interrelate in a deep and complex way.
v
(transitive) To form veins mutually with.
v
(formal, intransitive) To undergo interversion; to exchange places.
v
(intransitive) To intermingle.
n
An interweaving.
v
(transitive) To work (two or more things) into and through each other.
v
(transitive) To interweave items.
adj
Alternative spelling of MD5-summed [(cryptography) Having had its MD5 checksum computed.]
v
(transitive) To arrange in a mosaic.
v
To interleave several activities.
v
(mathematics) Of sets: to have some elements in common.
v
(transitive) To add or to interrupt at regular intervals.
v
(transitive, mathematics) To form the central angle of a circle underneath an arc

Note: Concept clusters like the one above are an experimental OneLook feature. We've grouped words and phrases into thousands of clusters based on a statistical analysis of how they are used in writing. Some of the words and concepts may be vulgar or offensive. The names of the clusters were written automatically and may not precisely describe every word within the cluster; furthermore, the clusters may be missing some entries that you'd normally associate with their names. Click on a word to look it up on OneLook.
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