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Showing results for interfuse. Search instead for interfusi.
Definitions

interfuse

[in-ter-fyooz] / ˌɪn tərˈfjuz /








Example Sentences

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In what is easily the most revelatory show I’ve seen in this sluggish cabaret season, Ms. Starlite and her alter ego eerily interfuse.

From New York Times Feb. 19, 2016

This alone made it possible to interfuse the two writings as we now have them in the Pentateuch.

From Prolegomena by Wellhausen, Julius

My first endeavor to solve the new questions was to check the abandon of the trance condition, and interfuse it with more of sober consciousness.

From The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 06, No. 38, December, 1860 by Various

For, build with what materials she may, the works of genius that stand in the world of thought survive all time's mutations, cemented by a spirit she alone can interfuse.

From Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 58, Number 358, August 1845 by Various

“Alpheus, Elis’ stream, they say, Beneath the seas here found his way, And now his waters interfuse With thine, O fountain Arethuse, Beneath Sicilian skies.”

From Myths of Greece and Rome Narrated with Special Reference to Literature and Art by Guerber, H. A. (H?l?ne Adeline)

We are, he shows, so interfused with the environment that all life might be seen as a web of genes, and all minds a web of memes.

From Nature Jan. 13, 2020

The history and the taste of gin are interfused, ceaselessly, twist upon twist.

From The New Yorker Dec. 2, 2019

The picture also shows a bank of fog-like, low-lying haze illuminated by the setting sun against Pluto's dark side, and interfused with shadows from nearby mountains.

From BBC Sep. 17, 2015

He makes an important claim about how the particular and the general, the individual and the communal, are interfused.

From Slate Jun. 27, 2013

The moral is interwoven and interfused with it, and every line breathes the soul and essence of the entire composition.

From The Bridling of Pegasus Prose Papers on Poetry by Austin, Alfred

Of course we must guard against hasty generalizations, since the interfusing of various elements in our Western States is producing new types of manhood.

From The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 02, No. 12, October, 1858 by Various

Sometimes the colours ran together, and made a little river or lake of lambent interfusing and changing tints, which, by their variegation, seemed to imitate the flowing of water, or waves made by the wind.

From The Princess and Curdie by MacDonald, George

Amid such splendor I began to realize that love has the power of spiritualizing all things, of interfusing them with its own rapture.

From The Goddess of Atvatabar Being the history of the discovery of the interior world and conquest of Atvatabar by Bradshaw, William Richard

For over all these things, and interfusing itself with the sparkling electricity in which she seemed to swim, was an ever-creeping and condensing haze of ambiguities.

From Pierre; or The Ambiguities by Melville, Herman

Sometimes the colours ran together, and made a little river or lake of lambent, interfusing, and changing tints, which, by their variegation, seemed to imitate the flowing of water, or waves made by the wind.

From The Princess and Curdie by MacDonald, George




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