interblend
Example Sentences
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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
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
Yet when I have stopped and listened determinedly, viciously analysing my sensations, have I become aware of a hubbub of frail and interblended sounds.
From My Tropic Isle by Banfield, E. J. (Edmund James)
Work, study, and worship were interblended in our life.
From A New England girlhood, outlined from memory (Beverly, MA) by Larcom, Lucy
It will not be all peace there; for the two worlds are interblended, and shadow into each other.
From Dawn by Adams, Harriet A.
My future and my past are so interblended, that I could as easily tear out my heart and continue to breathe, as attempt to separate them.
From At the Mercy of Tiberius by Evans, Augusta J. (Augusta Jane)
It seemed as if our nearest neighbors lived over there across the water; we breathed the air of foreign countries, curiously interblended with our own.
From A New England girlhood, outlined from memory (Beverly, MA) by Larcom, Lucy
The interblending of spirit and matter, is accomplished.
From Solaris Farm A Story of the Twentieth Century by Edson, Milan C.
But it bade fair 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 whale by Melville, Herman
Blue vision of depth lost in height,—sea and sky interblending through luminous haze.
From Kwaidan: Stories and Studies of Strange Things by Hearn, Lafcadio
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
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