en·tan·gling·ly,adverbin·ter·en·tan·gle,verb (used with object),in·ter·en·tan·gled,in·ter·en·tan·gling.un·en·tan·gle·a·ble,adjectiveun·en·tan·gled,adjectiveun·en·tan·gling,adjective
With hundreds of species entangled on them—consuming, eliminating, extracting, and synthesizing matter—these bacterial lawns, like the Ligurian pastures, have the characteristic of an undulating meadow in the spring, inside of us.
What the Meadow Teaches Us - Issue 90: Something Green|Andreas Weber|September 16, 2020|Nautilus
Make a bolaTechnically the bola is an impact weapon, but its other great feature is its ability to entangle a target.
This essential survival tool can save your life 10 different ways|By Tim MacWelch/Outdoor Life|September 15, 2020|Popular Science
The researchers used a single source of photon pairs that had been entangled, which means their quantum states are intrinsically linked and any change or measurement of one is mirrored in the other.
A New Breakthrough Just Brought City-Wide Quantum Communication Into Reach|Edd Gent|September 7, 2020|Singularity Hub
The researchers then split these entangled photon pairs up into multiple channels based on their wavelength before combining, or multiplexing, them and transmitting them over a single fiber optic cable.
A New Breakthrough Just Brought City-Wide Quantum Communication Into Reach|Edd Gent|September 7, 2020|Singularity Hub
Then there’s the trope of the crossdressing hero getting entangled in a sexually confusing romance, a plot that’s been used to inject queerness into stories since Shakespeare and beyond.
Toward a queer Disney canon|Emily VanDerWerff|September 4, 2020|Vox
We entangle them in a web of fear, of helplessness and anguish.
Introducing Tzipi Livni to the Occupation|Avner Gvaryahu|October 1, 2013|DAILY BEAST
I ask nothing better, Dom Claude; but what if I entangle myself in some villanous affair?
Notre-Dame de Paris|Victor Hugo
It was in vain that Metternich endeavoured to entangle the new Czar in the diplomatic web that had so long held his predecessor.
History of Modern Europe 1972-1878|C. A. Fyffe
They are gathered together to hear what He will say to their last attempt to entangle Him.
Expositor's Bible: The Gospel of Matthew|John Monro Gibson
It may be she will seek to entangle you in this plot, and make you one of the conspirators as the price of her favour.
The Intriguers|William Le Queux
The great danger was that they might entangle Austria in a war with Russia.
Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 3, Part 1, Slice 1|Various
British Dictionary definitions for entangle
entangle
/ (ɪnˈtæŋɡəl) /
verb(tr)
to catch or involve in or as if in a tangle; ensnare or enmesh