¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Intermingled
1. intermingle [v] - See also: intermingle
Lexicographical Neighbors of Intermingled
Literary usage of Intermingled
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Merchants' Magazine and Commercial Review by Isaac Smith Homans, William Buck Dana (1841)
"islands lies between St. Mary's, in Georgia, and Charleston, in South Carolina,
originally crowned with the evergreens of the south, intermingled with ..."
2. The History of the French Revolution by Adolphe Thiers, Frederic Shoberl (1866)
"The two armies were intermingled, and a nocturnal conflict ensued, in which both
sides were bent on slaughter, without distinguishing friend from foe. ..."
3. Text-book of Geology by Archibald Geikie (1885)
"welding of the folia into each other, the crystalline particles of one layer
being so intermingled with those of the layers ..."
4. Dictionary of the Bible: Comprising Its Antiquities, Biography, Geography by William Robertson Smith (1896)
"... tossed about in the wildest confusion, and intermingled with fissures and
crevices in every direction. Strange as it may seem, this forbidding region is ..."
5. Principles of City Land Values by Richard Melancthon Hurd (1903)
"All forces intermingled in the larger cities.— Final basis, energy, enterprise
and intellect of people. Defence against enemies, the chief factor in ..."