Narratives of widely different character are so interwoven as to aid each other, introducing fresh agents, combining these with those whom we have learned to know, but leaving the grand outlines of the main design untouched.
Maria Maddalena, where a simple dramatic motive is interwoven with the action of the whole piece and made to supply a proper ending.
I do not mean that other poets--Pulci and Bello, for example--had not interwoven episodical novelle.
The only one of these popularly familiar is the Ki-Lin, the history of which is interwoven with that of remote ages.
It is interesting to us to know that the Immaculate Conception of Mary has been interwoven in the earliest history of our own country.
Here are the names of Creator and creature interwoven like threads of gold and silver in the same woof, without provoking the jealousy of God.
We tolerate the romance for the sake of the pictures of Irish life interwoven with it.
The author has freely laid under contribution writers of renown, large extracts from whom are interwovenwith his narrative of personal experience.
Erratic enough are we to hold that there was one Homer, not many--that no purpurei panni of Peisistratus were interwoven with his cloth of gold--that he was an isolated leader of thought.
It is his practice and almost his nature to convey all the truth he knows without any attack on what he supposes falsehood, if that falsehood be interwoven with virtues or happiness.
In it fact and fancy are delicately interwoven with the geography and natural history of Sweden.
All this wasinterwoven with reflections on politics and discussions of the peace terms.
The former I will joyfully offer up to thee; but leave me the latter, which is so interwoven with my soul, that only death can part them.
Its chief merit is that it is essentially a free, not a mechanical method, and some of the specimens from the Rhine and Britain have really effective compositions of animals and interwoven scrolls.
They are, indeed, intimately interwoven with the subjects themselves, which they frame in, relieve, or embellish.
Leader of stakes interwoven with brush, 175 yards long.
Hedge 200 feet long, made of stakes driven in mudinterwoven with brush to low-water mark, covered with netting beyond.
These are extraordinarily subtle inquiries, from which few men succeed in disentangling the threads of their personal associations--the curiously interwoven strands of self-love and self-interest that affect their inquiries.
The wish was scarcely expressed when the man in the gray coat had his hand in his pocket, and was busied in drawing thence, with a modest and even humble deportment, a rich Turkey carpet interwoven with gold.
It consists of a series of letters supposed to be written by various persons, in which a narrative of passing events is interwoven with a love story.
Occasionally, the name of the estate is interwoven in the ornamentation, or sometimes it is carved on the stone entrance posts.
The landscape architect of to-day realizes that the achievements of yesterday can be interwoven with the possibilities of to-morrow.
Tonia sighed, remembering the melancholy thoughts interwoven with every line of that lively two-act burletta which she had squeezed out of Goldoni's five-act comedy.
If thou dreamest other poesy interwoven with laughter to conclude these merry inventions, heed not the foolish clamour and insults of those who, hearing the carol of a joyous lark of other days, exclaim: Ah, the horrid bird!
The greatest part of the other side of the obelisk, occupied by a sumptuous cross, is covered over with a uniform figure, elaborately raised, and interwoven with great mathematical exactness.
In some nests, the hair, the down, and the straws, are curiously laid across each other, and interwoven together.
As to the form of these mushrooms, their root is strong, uneven, divided according to its longitudinal direction, and composed of fibres as fine as hairs, interwoven one with another.
Its substance is muscular, being composed of fleshy fibres, interwoven with each other.
This consideration has been carefully interwoven with the story of the life which it was intended to illustrate, not to interrupt.
With these precious reminiscences were interwoven such extracts from her correspondence and diary as were deemed fittest to supply the outline of her own life and experience.
The practical growth and spread of French philosophy was too closely interwoven with the history of the salons not to call for a word here.
This individual has indelibly interwoven his name with the history of the Chippewa nation, during the latter half of the 18th century.
The history of the fur trade is closely interwoven with the history of intemperance among the Indians.
Dancing is thus interwoven throughout the whole texture of Indian society, so that there is scarcely an event important or trivial, private or public, which is not connected, more or less intimately, with this rite.
It has been remarked that the distinction of words into animates and inanimates, is a principle intimately interwoven throughout the structure of the language.
It was a network of friendships that became more and more interwoven by common hardships, deprivations, dangers, by isolation and the daily sharing of joys and troubles.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "interwoven" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word. Other words: fretted; interlaced; intertwined; interwoven; laced; plaited; raddled; textile; woven; wreathed