¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Interknitted
1. interknit [v] - See also: interknit
Lexicographical Neighbors of Interknitted
Literary usage of Interknitted
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Proceedings by Royal Geographical Society (Great Britain), Norton Shaw, Francis Galton, William Spottiswoode, Clements Robert Markham, Henry Walter Bates, John Scott Keltie (1883)
"... many floating islets formed of masses of aquatic vegetation, which are BO
strongly interknitted by their fibres and roots that a man can stand on them. ..."
2. The Mythology of All Races by John Arnott MacCulloch, Louis Herbert Gray, George Foot Moore, Alice Werner (1916)
"All this was a part of the Indian's implicit belief that all nature, including
human thought and action, represents one web of interknitted forces whose ..."
3. International Law: A Treatise by Lassa Oppenheim (1912)
"Since civilised States form a body interknitted through their interests, such
negotiation is in some shape or other constantly going on. ..."
4. The Letters of Henry James by Henry James (1920)
"... the pathos, the tragedy, tin- particular home-grown humanity under your e and
your hand and with which the life all about you was closely interknitted. ..."
5. A History of English Prosody from the Twelfth Century to the Present Day by George Saintsbury (1908)
"... blank-verse appeals are almost completely interknitted. So, too, indignatio
facit " blancos " versus for Hermia later; and her passion gets in even the ..."
6. American Syndicalism: The I. W. W. by John Graham Brooks (1913)
"Most people who retain their sanity, see that these interknitted powers neither
can be nor to be crushed. That in the common interest, I see tna I ought ..."
7. Marriage and Divorce by Felix Adler (1915)
"... are related to them and to each other, and through their children they themselves
become related to one another. Their lives become interknitted— or ..."