intermingle
to mingle, one with another; intermix.
Origin of intermingle
1Other words from intermingle
- in·ter·min·gle·ment, noun
- un·in·ter·min·gled, adjective
Words Nearby intermingle
Dictionary.com Unabridged Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
How to use intermingle in a sentence
With children and adults frequently intermingling in virtual spaces, maintaining these users’ safety and priority is more important than ever.
Case Study: How SuperAwesome helped brands and developers engage young audiences safely in 2021 | Alexander Lee | December 21, 2021 | DigidayWe also heard from some Americans who were now completely rethinking how they personally identified due to the way they saw race and politics intermingle in society today.
Who The Census Misses | Jasmine Mithani (Jasmine.Mithani@abc.com) | December 13, 2021 | FiveThirtyEightTo muddy the question of how politics and the pandemic intermingle, he then points to the current population-adjusted death toll from the virus, showing that two blue states, New Jersey and New York, have been hit hardest.
Comparing the red-state pandemic response now to blue states in early 2020 is dishonest | Philip Bump | August 31, 2021 | Washington PostHere, more than a million acres of private and state lands intermingle with the public lands, and this close relationship has brought out sharp contrasts in beliefs about how the grassland—and public lands in general—should be managed.
Like the Neanderthals, they are an early branch off the lineage that produced modern humans and later intermingled with modern humans.
Ancient skull a new window on human migrations, Denisovan meetings | John Timmer | October 29, 2020 | Ars Technica
I was raised in a conservative home where his books let my active imagination intermingle with my budding faith.
I’m a Christian, and Ken Ham Doesn’t Speak for Me | Brad Kramer | February 5, 2014 | THE DAILY BEASTIn a world where time does not exist, and facts intermingle with fiction, he finds he remains the detective he was.
At the end of four weeks the two sets of girls lined up on opposite sides of the room, utterly refusing to intermingle.
The Leaven in a Great City | Lillian William BettsIt may just possibly be found, without certificate, however, in those muddled caverns where the excluded intermingle.
Lord Ormont and his Aminta, Complete | George MeredithThe English intermingle in their decoration, colours very finely blended; nor do they find any transition too delicate.
Needlework As Art | Marian AlfordI notice that the trees in the swamp are rather close together, and the limbs intermingle.
The Dare Boys in Virginia | Stephen Angus CoxThey overlap and intermingle, like a gradation of colours, but the characteristics of each are perfectly distinct.
History of the Intellectual Development of Europe, Volume I (of 2) | John William Draper
British Dictionary definitions for intermingle
/ (ˌɪntəˈmɪŋɡəl) /
to mix or cause to mix or mingle together
Collins English Dictionary - Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
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