Advertisement
Advertisement
interfusion
noun as in blend
Strongest matches
noun as in mix/mixture
Weak matches
- admixture
- adulteration
- alloy
- amalgam
- amalgamation
- assimilation
- association
- batter
- blend
- brew
- combine
- combo
- commixture
- composite
- compound
- concoction
- confection
- conglomeration
- cross
- crossing
- dough
- fusion
- goulash
- grab bag
- hodgepodge
- hybrid
- hybridization
- incorporation
- infiltration
- jumble
- mash
- medley
- mélange
- merger
- mingling
- miscellany
- mishmash
- mixed bag
- mosaic
- package
- patchwork
- potpourri
- salmagundi
- saturation
- soup
- stew
- transfusion
- union
- variety
noun as in mixture
Strong matches
- admixture
- adulteration
- alloy
- amalgam
- amalgamation
- assimilation
- association
- brew
- combine
- combo
- commixture
- composite
- compound
- confection
- conglomeration
- cross
- crossing
- fusion
- goulash
- hodgepodge
- hybrid
- hybridization
- incorporation
- infiltration
- jumble
- mash
- medley
- merger
- mingling
- miscellany
- mishmash
- mosaic
- package
- patchwork
- potpourri
- salmagundi
- saturation
- transfusion
- union
Example Sentences
Of course there is a large interfusion of the blood of each of the trio through the dams of horses of the present day; indeed, it is impossible to find an English race-horse which does not combine the blood of all three.
As I look forward to-day, the great hope for America appears to be the interfusion of the Northern belief in solidarity with the ardent Southern faith in personal independence and responsibility.
Science, moreover, favors this experience, since it teaches that man extracts his bodily nourishment mediately or immediately from the vegetable kingdom, and thus lives at the cost of the atmosphere, needing not the interfusion of the spirit of beasts into his system to animalize and sustain him.
As the Greeks received their Gods from Egypt and Phœnicia, Rome hers from Greece, and we ours from Rome, Judea and Britain, by the law of interfusion we are ripening into a cosmopolitan faith, with its Pantheon for all races. ii.—method.
In other tales, Author Bradbury cultivates what he calls the sense of "infinite interfusion."
Advertisement
From Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse