Word Meanings - INTERPENETRATE - Book Publishers vocabulary database
To penetrate between or within; to penetrate mutually. It interpenetrates my granite mass. Shelley.
Possible synonyms: (Same meaning words of INTERPENETRATE)
- Inosculate
- Blend
- unite
- intertwine
- solidify
- anastomose
- intersect
- interpenetrate
- Twist
- Contort
- convolve
- complicate
- pervert
- distort
- wrest
- wreath
- wind
- encircle
- form
- weave
- insinuate
Related words: (words related to INTERPENETRATE)
- UNITERABLE
Not iterable; incapable of being repeated. "To play away an uniterable life." Sir T. Browne. - CONTORTION
A twisting; a writhing; wry motion; a twist; as, the contortion of the muscles of the face. Swift. All the contortions of the sibyl, without the inspiration. Burke. - WRESTLE
1. To contend, by grappling with, and striving to trip or throw down, an opponent; as, they wrestled skillfully. To-morrow, sir, I wrestle for my credit, and he that escapes me without some broken limb shall acquit him well. Shak. Another, by a - INTERPENETRATE
To penetrate between or within; to penetrate mutually. It interpenetrates my granite mass. Shelley. - ANASTOMOSE
To inosculate; to intercommunicate by anastomosis, as the arteries and veins. The ribbing of the leaf, and the anastomosing network of its vessels. I. Taylor. (more info) Etym: (Anat. & Bot.) - WEAVER
A weaver bird. (more info) 1. One who weaves, or whose occupation is to weave. "Weavers of linen." P. Plowman. - CONVOLVE
To roll or wind together; to roll or twist one part on another. Then Satan first knew pain, And writhed him to and fro convolved. Milton. (more info) Etym: - WREATHLESS
Destitute of a wreath. - WREATHE
1. To cause to revolve or writhe; to twist about; to turn. And from so heavy sight his head did wreathe. Spenser. 2. To twist; to convolve; to wind one about another; to entwine. The nods and smiles of recognition into which this singular - BLENDER
One who, or that which, blends; an instrument, as a brush, used in blending. - SOLIDIFY
To become solid; to harden. - WEAVE
1. To practice weaving; to work with a loom. 2. To become woven or interwoven. - TWISTING
a. & n. from Twist. Twisting pair. See under Pair, n., 7. - WREATH-SHELL
A marine shell of the genus Turbo. See Turbo. - DISTORTIVE
Causing distortion. - INTERTWINE
The act intertwining, or the state of being intertwined. Coleridge. - TWISTER
A girder. Craig. (more info) 1. One who twists; specifically, the person whose occupation is to twist or join the threads of one warp to those of another, in weaving. 2. The instrument used in twisting, or making twists. He, twirling his twister, - TWIST
1. To be contorted; to writhe; to be distorted by torsion; to be united by winding round each other; to be or become twisted; as, some strands will twist more easily than others. 2. To follow a helical or spiral course; to be in the form - CONTORT
To twist, or twist together; to turn awry; to bend; to distort; to wrest. The vertebral arteries are variously contorted. Ray. Kant contorted the term category from the proper meaning of attributed. Sir W. Hamilton. - SATIN WEAVE
A style of weaving producing smooth-faced fabric in which the warp interlaces with the filling at points distributed over the surface. - UNWEAVE
To unfold; to undo; to ravel, as what has been woven. - INTERTWIST
To twist together one with another; to intertwine. - UNTWIST
1. To separate and open, as twisted threads; to turn back, as that which is twisted; to untwine. If one of the twines of the twist do untwist, The twine that untwisteth, untwisteth the twist. Wallis. 2. To untie; to open; to disentangle. Milton. - BLEND
akin to Goth. blandan to mix, Icel. blanda, Sw. blanda, Dan. blande, 1. To mix or mingle together; esp. to mingle, combine, or associate so that the separate things mixed, or the line of demarcation, can not be distinguished. Hence: To confuse; - INTERWREATHE
To weave into a wreath; to intertwine. Lovelace. - INWREATHE
Resplendent locks, inwreathed with beams. Milton. - WREST
1. To turn; to twist; esp., to twist or extort by violence; to pull of force away by, or as if by, violent wringing or twisting. "The secret wrested from me." Milton. Our country's cause, That drew our swords, now secret wrests them from our hand.