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Discover LudwigThe phrase "becoming intertwined" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English.
You can use it when describing two things that are starting to become related to each other in a complicated way, such as a situation where two storylines are becoming increasingly interdependent. For example: "As the story progresses, the personal and political storylines of the novel begin becoming intertwined."
Exact(8)
It is the risk of that becoming intertwined with geopolitics.
He recognized that Mexico and the United States were becoming intertwined, but worried on what terms.
This new crisis is emerging even before the last one has been resolved, and the two are becoming intertwined.
With the possibility of technology becoming intertwined with our very bodies, the threat of unauthorised access looms large.
And "Orchestra of Exiles" demonstrates the very concrete way in which culture is preserved and maintained, with transmission and human survival becoming intertwined realities.
But one of the exhibition's most astonishing displays near its very end shows that in time this complaint might come to seem somewhat quaint: Biological events, human experience and mechanical devices are becoming intertwined in the latest research.
Similar(50)
The two become intertwined.
Both social conservatives and gay rights groups say their debate is becoming increasingly intertwined with the presidential election.
For a critic, the question of how listeners acquire and consume new music can feel tangential or tedious — it's far more exciting, after all, to talk about the music itself — but the two topics are once again becoming inextricably intertwined.
The move to repeat that performance in biology comes as Japanese pharmaceutical companies are becoming increasingly intertwined with their American and European counterparts.
This entire enterprise was becoming inextricably intertwined with my life.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com