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Showing results for interblend. Search instead for interpled.
Definitions

interblend

[in-ter-blend] / ˌɪn tərˈblɛnd /






Example Sentences

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They so interblend that, the dividing line cannot be detected by the untrained eye of the exact scientist.

From The Light of Egypt; or, the science of the soul and the stars — Volume 2 by Burgoyne, Thomas H.

Spirit soils and atmosphere interblend and produce trees, shrubs, flowers, and the cereals, but the human being, after the second birth, ceases to reproduce his species.

From Strange Visitors by Horn, Henry J.

The finest gold I’d interblend, The richest pearls as white as snow.

From Servian Popular Poetry by Bowring, John

And the creole street-cries, uttered in a sonorous, far-reaching high key, interblend and produce random harmonies very pleasant to hear.

From Two Years in the French West Indies by Hearn, Lafcadio

The finest gold I'd interblend, The richest pearls as white as snow.

From An Anthology of Jugoslav Poetry; Serbian Lyrics by Various

The qualities were not interblended, and even the colors were separate.

From A Breeze from the Woods, 2nd Ed. by Bartlett, William Chauncey

By 1550, when such ballads were certainly current both in England and Scotland, they were late, confused by tradition, and, of what we possess, say Herd's, and the English MS. of 1550, all were interblended.

From Sir Walter Scott and the Border Minstrelsy by Lang, Andrew

Three chief strains are subtly interblended in the composition.

From The House of Cobwebs and Other Stories by Gissing, George

A critical research shows that astronomy and religion were interblended, interwoven, and confounded together at a very early period of time, so indissolubly, that it now becomes impossible to separate them.

From The World's Sixteen Crucified Saviors Or, Christianity Before Christ by Graves, Kersey

Thus their magnetisms have become so interblended, that one has nothing to give the other.

From Dawn by Adams, Harriet A.

Dendroden′tine, the form of branched dentine seen in compound teeth, produced by the interblending of the dentine, enamel, and cement.

From Chambers's Twentieth Century Dictionary (part 1 of 4: A-D) by Various

The interblending of spirit and matter, is accomplished.

From Solaris Farm A Story of the Twentieth Century by Edson, Milan C.

Its importance, indeed, can only be denied by denying the swamping effects of intercrossing, and such denial implies the tacit assumption that interbreeding and interblending are held in check by some form of segregation.

From Darwin, and After Darwin (Vol 3 of 3) Post-Darwinian Questions: Isolation and Physiological Selection by Romanes, George John

Prophesy the greater union of all hearts in this interblending of all minds.

From The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 09, No. 55, May, 1862 by Various

But it bade far to outstrip them; it flew on and on, as a mass of interblending bubbles borne down a rapid stream from the hills.

From Moby Dick: or, the White Whale by Melville, Herman




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