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to twine
verb
To weave together.
synonyms
Exact(23)
Leavitt chooses to twine this story around Lord Alfred Douglas; this time, he has a bibliography.
Anna Anthropy who has created incredibly intimate titles like Dys4ia and Triad, has written a simple guide to Twine.
Katrin Svana Eythorsdottir, another designer from Iceland, made a "chandelier" from beads of glucose that clung to twine and caught the natural light.
So why do we go into panic mode when someone introduces a new way for humans to twine their lives with technology?
After growing in a few spirals around one host shoot, the dodder finds its way to another, and it continues to twine and branch until it resembles a fine, densely tangled web of thin stems enveloping the host plant.
There, in a gloomy, biscuit-colored room that overlooked a vegetable garden whose zucchini vines were already beginning to twine onto municipal property, I found two bored young carabinieri at their desks.
Similar(37)
Habit: Sprawling to twining, 18--60 dm; herbage puberulent.
Malabar nightshade, also known as Malabar spinach, refers to twining herbaceous vines of the genus Basella (family Basellaceae).
Inflorescence: scapose, generally umbel-like; scape erect, generally 1(2), cylindric, generally rigid, occasionally wavy to twining; flower bracts 2--4, not enclosing flower buds.
This sialidase was preincubated with casein and resorufin-labeled according to Twining [ 25] to prevent protease activity.
We identified 388 patients with CM-I and no associated etiological cofactors in whom the PCF was characteristically small with increasing constriction inferior to Twining's line.
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