If it turns out that dodders truly use only FT from hosts to induce flowering, Westwood says that would be a simple and elegant example of how evolution has entwined plant parasites with the organisms they depend on for survival.
This parasitic plant eavesdrops on its host to know when to flower|Jonathan Lambert|September 4, 2020|Science News
For Crompton, this particular produce-themed product is closely entwined with art history.
Summer Is Forever With This Corn-on-the-Cob Chair|Emma Orlow|August 28, 2020|Eater
C2 was clearly preferable, since the disparate strands needed to entwine.
A Mathematically Impossible Novel: Manil Suri Explains “The City of Devi”|Manil Suri|March 15, 2013|DAILY BEAST
Thought and action are not mutually exclusive; at their best, they entwine, like a strand of DNA.
Is Obama Too Thoughtful?|Michael Signer|February 13, 2010|DAILY BEAST
Serpents and dragons 82 entwine on the lintels, and emblematize the Church's power to overcome.
The Cathedral Builders|Leader Scott
We stock the farm with creeping and climbing plants, without any trees of firmer growth for them to entwine round.
Garden Cities of To-Morrow|Ebenezer Howard
Her eyes never moved from him, her fingers to the last sought to entwine themselves with his.
The Shadow of Ashlydyat|Mrs. Henry Wood
I will entwine my bright sword in myrtle, After the example of Harmodius and Aristogiton.
Quo Vadis|Henryk Sienkiewicz
I wish Sympson would come again, and oblige her again to entwine her arms about me.
Shirley|Charlotte Bront
British Dictionary definitions for entwine
entwine
intwine
/ (ɪnˈtwaɪn) /
verb
(of two or more things) to twine together or (of one or more things) to twine around (something else)