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Definition of Interwork
1. Verb. (transitive) To work (two or more things) into and through each other. ¹
2. Verb. (intransitive) To interact. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Interwork
1. [v -ED, -ING, -S]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Interwork
Literary usage of Interwork
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Creator and Creation: Or, The Knowledge in the Reason of God and His Work by Laurens Perseus Hickok (1872)
"Expulses and impulses may so interwork to make all distinguishable forces, and
then forces may interwork in endless compositions, resolutions, conversions, ..."
2. The Popular Science Monthly by Harry Houdini Collection (Library of Congress) (1893)
"If we regard the university, as is our pride, to be more than an auxiliary to
the professional schools, we must also demand an effective interwork- ing of ..."
3. Energy Efficiency: Challenges and Trends for Electric Utilities (1993)
"The Grid may some day interwork with its overseas analogues by exchanging and
understanding knowledge bases and applications (such as models, simulations, ..."
4. The Religious Revolution of To-day by James Thomson Shotwell (1913)
"These interwork, and in modern religion all three are generally present. Of them,
habit is the strongest, and mysticism the weakest, while faith serves as a ..."
5. Rational Cosmology: Or, The Eternal Principles and the Necessary Laws of the by Laurens Perseus Hickok (1858)
"... and interwork and dissolve and counterwork each other in many new varieties
of action, and we have opened at once all the necessities for chemical ..."
6. Human Psychology by Howard Crosby Warren (1919)
"The final outcome from this standpoint is personal control, which represents the
interwork- ing of all the specific phases. Speaking in terms of behavior, ..."