interlacement

Definition of interlacementnext

Example Sentences

Recent Examples of Synonyms for interlacement
Noun
  • How Tires Are Made Starting from the inside out, a tire’s strength is provided by its carcass, a meshwork steel or synthetic fibers.
    Wes Siler, Outside, 16 Sep. 2025
  • Protect Your Eyes The eye's drainage system (the trabecular meshwork) can be damaged by blunt force injury, such as an object hitting the eye.
    Maxine Lipner, Verywell Health, 10 Mar. 2025
Noun
  • The red mesh sack, of the kind typically used to store oranges or onions, is stamped with her name, immigration number and date of deportation.
    Mathew Miranda, Sacbee.com, 31 Mar. 2026
  • Marland plans to install a mesh top over the kangaroo enclosure to prevent future escapes.
    Adeola Adeosun, MSNBC Newsweek, 30 Mar. 2026
Noun
  • Randolph’s body vaulted off the car, creating a web of cracks in the driver’s side windshield.
    Emerson Clarridge Updated March 27, Fort Worth Star-Telegram, 28 Mar. 2026
  • The scandal is now expanding into an international investigation, placing Miami at the center of a complex web of shell companies, offshore transfers and opaque financial flows.
    Antonio María Delgado, Miami Herald, 27 Mar. 2026
Noun
  • The word complexity comes from the Latin plexus, which means intertwined.
    Carlos Gershenson, The Conversation, 11 Dec. 2025
  • The nervous system manages the entire lower body through an intricate web of nerves called the lumbar plexus, which is embedded through the psoas.
    Literary Hub, Literary Hub, 7 May 2025
Noun
  • What was once two city blocks of dingy industrial warehouses is now an alluring complex of stores, cafes, artist studios and event space meant to attract Fort Lauderdale’s burgeoning population of young professionals and South Floridians willing to drive from Miami and West Palm Beach.
    Amanda Rosa, Miami Herald, 25 Mar. 2026
  • The more complex the problems become, the greater the demands on those external resources, while those resources themselves — due to the increasing specialization of the nature of the assignments — become less available, less comprehensive, and less sufficient overall.
    Ethan Siegel, Big Think, 25 Mar. 2026
Noun
  • Bo Bichette didn't have a great first weekend in a New York Mets uniform, going 1-for-14 on the whole and failing to come through with runners in scoring position twice during the late innings of Sunday's series finale, which wound up becoming the Mets' first loss of the season.
    Jackson Roberts, MSNBC Newsweek, 30 Mar. 2026
  • Reimagining the building in whole or in part as a residence is a thrilling idea (and Francis Ford Coppola did it most recently, in his bizarre and wildly ambitious film Megalopolis), but the economics of conversion will be trickier than for the Flatiron.
    Christopher Bonanos, Curbed, 27 Mar. 2026
Noun
  • But in the aggregate, Operation Catahoula Crunch was, by its own metrics, failing.
    Daniel Brook, Harpers Magazine, 24 Mar. 2026
  • That 8-2 aggregate defeat by Paris Saint-Germain should be a wake-up-and-smell-the-coffee moment for those owners and executives who have spent the past few years congratulating themselves on a recruitment strategy that increasingly has the look of a social experiment.
    Oliver Kay, New York Times, 21 Mar. 2026
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Cite this Entry

“Interlacement.” Merriam-Webster.com Thesaurus, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/interlacement. Accessed 31 Mar. 2026.

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