entwine
Americanverb (used with or without object)
verb
Other Word Forms
Derived Forms
Inflected Forms
Participles
Conjugated Forms
Present
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entwinesimple
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entwinessimple
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have entwinedperfect
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has entwinedperfect
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am entwiningprogressive
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are entwiningprogressive
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is entwiningprogressive
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have been entwiningperfect progressive
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has been entwiningperfect progressive
Past
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entwinedsimple
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had entwinedperfect
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was entwiningprogressive
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were entwiningprogressive
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had been entwiningperfect progressive
Future
Etymology
Origin of entwine
Explanation
To entwine is to twist and tangle or weave together. When you hold hands with someone, you entwine your fingers together. A long-haired girl can entwine flowers in her curls, and she might love it when her pet snake entwines around her arm. When you knit a scarf, you entwine different colors of yarn together. There is also a figurative way to entwine: "Ever since I met you, I knew that our lives would entwine together!" Entwine combines the prefix en-, "make," and twine, "twisted strands," from the Old English twin, "double thread."
Vocabulary lists containing entwine
Stamped
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Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets
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The Last Olympian
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Example Sentences
Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.
See Examples For:
And so it goes in “The Last Kings of Hollywood,” as the lives and ambitions of Messrs. Coppola, Lucas and Spielberg entwine around one another in a triple helix.
From The Wall Street Journal ● Feb. 13, 2026
This further helped entwine wedding planning with aspirations of luxury and glamor.
From Salon ● Apr. 12, 2024
Ms Yellen too has made clear that severing the deep economic ties that now entwine the US and Chinese economies would hurt everyone.
From BBC ● Jul. 7, 2023
And I brainstormed how to build a strong political narrative that would entwine with the emotional line, and also how to make it really funny.
From Los Angeles Times ● Jun. 20, 2023
Our brown hands entwine beneath moonshine, clasping all the love we'll ever need—
From "Bronx Masquerade" by Nikki Grimes
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It entwines with healthy cells, meaning it can't be removed surgically.
From Science Daily ● Nov. 2, 2023
The wrap visually entwines the culture, community and colours of Notting Hill Carnival and the 75-year history of Windrush, TfL said.
From BBC ● Aug. 26, 2023
Still, trade entwines the U.S. and Chinese economies.
From Seattle Times ● Jul. 2, 2023
“An immaculately scripted hour that entwines two decades of salient political history with a finely worked portrait of the English establishment,” Lucy Mangan wrote in The Observer.
From New York Times ● Jun. 22, 2018
My green cloud entwines with his silver one, and I feel the recent tension between us lift a little.
From "A Mango-Shaped Space" by Wendy Mass
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She came to both practices — spiritual companionship and archery — separately before they organically entwined.
From Los Angeles Times ● Jun. 30, 2026
Raves have become entwined with D&B’s push to boost its numbers, a way the company is trying to distinguish itself in the ubercompetitive “eatertainment” landscape that it helped create.
From Slate ● Jun. 25, 2026
Emeritus professor Maggie Humm, vice chair of the Virginia Woolf Society of Great Britain, said the view was "absolutely central to Woolf, absolutely entwined".
From BBC ● Feb. 14, 2026
Cuba’s fate has long been entwined with Venezuela: subsidized Venezuelan oil has been a mainstay of its economy since shortly after Hugo Chávez took power in Venezuela in 1999.
From The Wall Street Journal ● Jan. 22, 2026
His hair is made of snakes, entwined in braids, with wings for his headdress.
From "The Lives of a Cell" by Lewis Thomas
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The message harked back to the old U.S. policy of further entwining the American and Chinese economies, breaking with an approach pioneered during the first Trump administration to untangle business ties, largely for national-security reasons.
From The Wall Street Journal ● May 14, 2026
So, too, is the film’s music, composer Anthony Willis and soundtrack artist Charlie XCX entwining raspy strings with grimy, ominous shudders.
From Los Angeles Times ● Feb. 11, 2026
Pets and humans have ever-broader options for entwining their daily lives, routines and milestone moments.
From Salon ● Jun. 16, 2025
Here, the entwining duet looked closer to the cleaning of a messy toddler, but it helped reveal Cherkaoui’s heavy influence on the rolling, martial-arts flow of Kittelberger’s choreography.
From New York Times ● Jan. 22, 2023
“I don’t mind,” Marco says, entwining his fingers with hers.
From "The Night Circus" by Erin Morgenstern
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.