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Definition of Intermixture
1. Noun. Any foodstuff made by combining different ingredients. "He drank a mixture of beer and lemonade"
Generic synonyms: Food Product, Foodstuff
Specialized synonyms: Mincemeat, Dressing, Stuffing, Roux, Batter, Dough, Mix, Premix, Filling
Derivative terms: Concoct, Mix
2. Noun. An additional ingredient that is added by mixing with the base. "A large intermixture of sand"
3. Noun. The act of mixing together. "The mixing of sound channels in the recording studio"
Generic synonyms: Combination, Combining, Compounding
Derivative terms: Admix, Commix, Intermix, Mix, Mix, Mix, Mix, Mix, Mix, Mix, Mix, Mix, Mix, Mix
Definition of Intermixture
1. n. A mass formed by mixture; a mass of ingredients mixed.
Definition of Intermixture
1. Noun. A mass formed by mixture; a mass of ingredients mixed. ¹
2. Noun. Admixture; an additional ingredient. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Intermixture
1. [n -S]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Intermixture
Literary usage of Intermixture
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The American and English Encyclopedia of Law by John Houston Merrill, Charles Frederic Williams, Thomas Johnson Michie, David Shephard Garland (1892)
"The inextricable confusion of his goods with those of another gives the latter
this right, provided the intermixture was wrongful.1 But it is only of ..."
2. Goethe's Theory of Colours by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1840)
"intermixture, APPARENT. 560. THE intermixture, which is only apparent, naturally
invites our attention in connexion with the foregoing ; it is in many ..."
3. An essay on the origin and development of window tracery in England by Edward Augustus Freeman (1851)
"intermixture. Of windows formed by combination of Geometrical and Foil patterns,
the first class, which exhibits simple intermixture, is not an important ..."
4. Lectures on Man: His Place in Creation, and in the History of the Earth by Karl Christoph Vogt, James Hunt (1864)
"Time requisite for such modifications.—intermixture of Races.—Differences in
Prolificacy in various Mongrels.—intermixture of White Races between themselves ..."
5. Logic, Deductive and Inductive by Carveth Read (1898)
"Hence Mill calls this the " homogeneous intermixture of effects," because the
antecedents and consequents are fundamentally of the same kind. ..."
6. An Introduction to Geology: Intended to Convey a Practical Knowledge of the by Robert Bakewell, Benjamin Silliman (1833)
"FURTHER OBSERVATIONS ON THE intermixture OF HUMAN BONES WITH THOSE OF ...
The remarkable intermixture of human bones with those of bears, in the cavern of ..."
7. The History of Herodotus: A New English Version by Herodotus, George Rawlinson, Henry Creswicke Rawlinson, John Gardner Wilkinson (1858)
"intermixture of races in Western Asia. 2. Earliest population Turanian. 3. ...
It is symptomatic of this curious intermixture, that the Persian monarchs, ..."