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112 Sentences With "interweaves"

How to use interweaves in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "interweaves" and check conjugation/comparative form for "interweaves". Mastering all the usages of "interweaves" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Her practice interweaves text, movement, sound, digital media, and visual installation.
Mr. Salahi freely interweaves Modernist abstraction, Arabic calligraphy and architectural motifs.
The NBC drama interweaves '80s and '90s flashbacks in with present-day situations.
There's something about dream logic that's really fascinating, how it interweaves with narrative.
Along the way, he interweaves poems and narratives from members of his family.
It interweaves her professional and personal lives as she becomes closer to Jill.
Claire Cameron's evocative novel "The Last Neanderthal" also interweaves the contemporary with the primeval.
Like Picasso, she plays with scale and perspective, and interweaves human subjects with the surreal.
Along the way, she interweaves revealing anecdotes — spanning everything from Freud to recent scientific debates.
The way the author interweaves the magic and mythical part into the mundane was very well done.
Carson's text interweaves the stories of Helen of Troy and Marilyn Monroe, attempting to deconstruct mythologies of beauty.
"Walker creates a polyphonic work that elegantly interweaves multiple strands," Corinna da Fonseca-Wollheim writes in her review.
Her book interweaves moments that shaped her own theory of how to give patients the best possible care.
Bala interweaves the story of the internment of almost 24,000 Canadian citizens of Japanese origin in the 1940s.
He is also a gifted storyteller who interweaves the personal stories with the broad history of artificial intelligence.
In the Lifeline Zine, she interweaves inspirational quotes from famous writers with letters and art by New York prisoners.
The game interweaves the narratives of two characters that never meet, but experience opposite ends of the economic spectrum.
He interweaves the strands of a long and variegated life with sympathy, elegance and awareness of the wider picture.
This memoir of struggling with depression interweaves autobiography with literary and historical meditations on the nature of the condition.
"Apeirogon," like other books by McCann, interweaves real people with imagined conversations, scenes and other details of their lives.
To explore their outsize influence, Bazelon follows the cases of two defendants, and interweaves their stories with academic research.
A Wrinkle in Time interweaves science (tesseracts are explained using particle physics and geometry) with fantasy (there are space centaurs).
Her patchwork quilt of a book interweaves occasional New Age banalities with real insight to achieve a somehow pleasing totality.
Above all, it gives Lee a voice: The documentary interweaves Lee's diary, making her a narrator of the first episode.
With her self-titled project, she interweaves minimal synth 70s horror vibes with cinematic waves of a more romantic variety.
"Best of Enemies" interweaves the wittiest hits from the debates with an exploration of the men's backgrounds, personalities and similarities.
Vázquez interweaves memories of her upbringing with a rundown of civic practices that, in combination, led to the Bronx's decline.
After all, this is a collection that interweaves the stories of leviathans such as Jonah's whale and Melville's Moby Dick.
But we have more convincing evidence than simple chronology (though in a show like Westworld, which interweaves so many timelines, that's something).
Hadestown is set in depression-era New York City instead of ancient Greece, and also interweaves the story of Persephone and Hades.
Mr. Morales also interweaves his own family's migration to New York in his discussion of the United States' policy toward the island.
Organized by Taipei Fine Arts Museum (TFAM), the Taipei Biennial's five-month long program interweaves exhibitions, performances, screenings, symposiums, readings, conferences, and workshops.
It all makes for an album that interweaves social and political truth-telling with extreme personal joy, all under a cloud of heartache.
Alongside the horror, the book interweaves a critique of capitalism while evoking "a first-generation immigrant's nostalgia for New York," our reviewer writes.
On the other hand, "Shirley Temple" imagines a much more convoluted and compelling story that fictitiously interweaves the lives of Warhol and Temple.
Thomson interweaves personal memoir and cinematic history, indulging a penchant for searching, grandstanding questions, as he tacks from steamy classics to Tinseltown scandals.
The book deals plainly with Leonardo's contradictions, giving the story complexity and depth, and Isaacson interweaves his subject's contemplations of nature with his art.
Bill Morrison (the found-footage collage "Decasia") uses those clips to tell a story that interweaves film history and a sociological history of Dawson.
Writer and curator Ladi'Sasha Jones of The Laundromat Project will provide an introduction to McClodden's work, which interweaves questions of gender, sexuality, and race.
"Chronicle" interweaves real-time performances of Johann Sebastian Bach's piano works with extracts from a fictional diary kept by his wife, the title character.
Thursday, next Friday and June 17, it interweaves a companion piece to "Actual Size," a celebration of female strength titled "Threading In," and structured improvisations.
In this instance, Thomas fluently interweaves cultural signifiers, like Huey P. Newton's recognizable rattan peacock chair and a silky durag, into her meticulously curated studio set.
The choreographer Guillaume Côté draws on a range of vocabularies, from ballet to jazz to contemporary, in a production that interweaves digital media with the analogue world.
Her new book, "Swell", interweaves her own story with a history of female pioneers, "swimming suffragettes" who accomplished remarkable feats and paved the way for future generations.
"Inland" interweaves the story of Nora and her homestead with the adventures of a young immigrant known as Lurie, an Anglicized version of his original surname, Djurić.
In "My War Criminal," she interweaves excerpts from their conversations with explanations of the history of the Bosnian war and reflections on the influences that shaped Karadzic.
Forming a coherent narrative that interweaves the storylines of nearly two-dozen characters who have starred in 19 films over the last decade is a Hulk-ulean feat.
The film interweaves the stories of it's central characters, who, with little restraint, tell tales of homelessness, homophobia, and transitioning in a city that can oftentimes be unforgiving.
Even more surprisingly, the new God of War game has added more than a son; it interweaves a kind of narrative that never existed in the franchise before.
Rather than presenting the interconnectedness of life as sanitized and magical, Yoshigai interweaves an element of violence, as our relationship with our planet requires sacrifice to maintain balance.
It interweaves a variety of perspectives, including those of the space travelers, of mission control, of onlookers anticipating the liftoff and of naval officers awaiting the capsule's splashdown.
It effectively interweaves stories about individuals who played a role in the psychedelic movement or have personally experimented with and experienced psychedelics for mind-expanding or therapeutic purposes.
Immersed in cultural and lingual elements from a vast yet often overlooked part of the world in Eurocentric discourse, the exhibition swiftly interweaves subtleties uniting and diverging these cultures.
The narrator of Story of Your Life interweaves her interactions with the aliens and with her daughter so seamlessly that the reader doesn't realize the plots aren't in parallel.
Like a vintage cigarette advertisement, he interweaves menacing content and cheerful lyrics into playful templates, excitedly stacking syllables on top of each other to craft openhearted yet grimy songs.
"Shot Caller" interweaves before-and-after timelines, toggling between Jacob's initiation and his life after release, a decade later, as a tattooed, muscular ex-con plotting an arms deal.
"Star Dust (Zorianyi Pyl)" — an installation by Crimean artist Maria Kulikovska, who is based in Kyiv — interweaves the contemporary situation in the peninsula with the personal history of her family.
And the monument interweaves late-19th- and early-20th-century personalities with women from subsequent generations who carried on the suffrage dream through civic action or by holding elected office.
It veers from the Gothic to the satirical and seamlessly interweaves social commentary on everything from gender to the cultural hegemony to our obsessions with social media and future tech.
After making a large print, Meyer then takes the headwrap used in the photo, and the print, tearing both into strips that he then interweaves by hand to create another portrait.
Statovci interweaves the stories of Emine, a young Kosovan bride, and her son, Bekim, whom the aftershocks of exile continue to roil three decades after her fateful wedding to his father.
The work of composer Du Yun ranges across musical genres, from medieval polyphony to punk, in a way that interweaves and juxtaposes the sacred and the profane without ever degrading to pastiche.
Nothing dramatic happens to the boy, but Drnaso interweaves the ordinary details of a family trip with half a dozen panels in which Tyler fantasizes scenes of brutal revenge and outlandish orgies.
Spanning the years 1950 to 1969, "Abstract Climates" (which debuted at the Provincetown Art Association and Museum last summer) deftly interweaves creative and personal breakthroughs with a combination of artworks and ephemera.
Spanning the years 1950 to 1969, "Abstract Climates" (which debuted at the Provincetown Art Association and Museum last summer) deftly interweaves creative and personal breakthroughs with a combination of artworks and ephemera.
This week's selection is Theo Anthony's highly original "Rat Film," opening this fall, a documentary that interweaves the history of racism in the city planning of Baltimore with the history of pest extermination.
Weiner interweaves natural and human history, and reports on the Grants' groundbreaking discovery that in just a generation — they had been observing the finches for 20 years — the species' beak size had evolved.
Fortunately, Crush stands by his word — he seamlessly interweaves a highly minimalistic sound with deep yet simple emotions from times past, leaving all the stuffiness and complexities of the present in the dust.
He's the love interest and periodic antagonist of Heart Berries, which interweaves the story of their relationship and Mailhot's stay at a mental health facility with her upbringing on, and flight from, her reservation.
Jeff Donaldson, one of the cofounders, painted "In the Valley of Eshu" (1971), which interweaves Yoruba and other African symbolism within a composition of a black couple that parallels Grant Wood's "American Gothic" (1930).
In this engagingly unacademic meditation, a professor of philosophy interweaves Friedrich Nietzsche's biography with accounts of his own visits to Sils-Maria, in the Swiss Alps, where Nietzsche spent much of his writing life.
This documentary, which covers events in Saudi Arabia from 2003 to 2009, interweaves videos made by Al Qaeda members there with footage shot by Saudi security forces of raids on terrorist suspects' safe houses.
The group's public stunts have resulted in ample news media coverage, and Lane deftly interweaves some of the funniest clips, like one of Greaves dryly resisting the questions of an incredulous-sounding Megyn Kelly.
The director, Daniel McCabe, primarily interweaves portraits of four individuals, starting at around the time that a rebel group known as the March 23 Movement, or M23, gained ground in the country in 2012.
The literary collaboration between Harlem Renaissance writer Langston Hughes and famed Kamoinge photographer Roy DeCarava interweaves image and text to chronicle a day in the life of a Harlem grandmother and her loved ones.
She interweaves the Victorians' writings about body image with their nonverbal habits — whether they groomed themselves or paid a barber for a shave, what muscles they used to lift a pail or squeeze an udder.
The Jimmy Buffett jukebox musical, with the book by Greg Garcia ("My Name Is Earl") and Mike O'Malley ("Shameless"), interweaves porch-rock classics with a story of a woman's vacation romance with the resort's showman.
Anthony Maras, making his first feature, interweaves these threads with precision and clarity, conveying an impressive sense of the hotel layout, the confusion of the circumstances and the visceral fear of hiding from the gunmen.
Showing on Friday, this week's selection is Theo Anthony's highly original "Rat Film," opening this fall, a documentary that interweaves the history of racism in the city planning of Baltimore with the history of pest extermination.
Narrated by an author much like Valdés — an ardently anti-Communist Cuban exile who lives in Paris with her husband and daughter, as Valdés has done — "The Weeping Woman" interweaves present and past with intelligence and humor.
The miniseries, which was adapted by filmmaker Sarah Polley, skillfully interweaves the three temporalities, underlining how women are taught to tell the stories of themselves and their trauma in ways that both titillate and exonerate the listener.
Chevalier (best known for her Vermeer novel, "Girl With a Pearl Earring") interweaves the lives of two real people, John Chapman, known as Johnny Appleseed, and the plant collector William Lobb, with that of her fictional characters.
The Beatles and their producer, George Martin, concocted eerie, unforgettable sounds from hand-played instruments and analog tape tricks; "Strawberry Fields," which miraculously interweaves two arrangements of the song in two keys, remains a marvel of internal disorientation.
Engaging "performing the archives, performing the architecture, performing the retrospective" with the invention of narratives, and embracing artistic trans-disciplinary experimentations and historical resonances, the biennial's five-month long program interweaves exhibitions, performances, screenings, symposiums, readings, conferences, and workshops.
Conceived and directed by Mr. Gelb, with dramaturgy and additional text by Dan O'Neil, it interweaves a reconstructed "Black Crook" (which, it bears mentioning, has nothing to do with race) with the story of the playwright Charles M. Barras.
As he interweaves a series of perceptive insights on architecture and human psychology, technology and ghost hunts, not to mention haunting as social control, Dickey shows how haunted places reveal what troubled us before and what troubles us now.
Alternating for more than a decade between Patsy and her daughter, who grapples with her mother's abandonment and her own sexuality in Jamaica, the novel interweaves life as an undocumented immigrant in America with questions about motherhood and freedom.
Going into Cobra Kai, you'd expect a story with a lot of black-and-white morality, but what you actually get is a complex tale that interweaves morality, community, and remixes a ton of what made the original great.
His tale is an elaborate mosaic that interweaves reflection with vivid memories — both inherited and his own — and a cacophonous medley of voices he is hard-pressed to filter out, which plague him as he works out his grim endgame.
Norton; 244 pages; $3363 and £18.99How India's youth are trading fatalism and karma for free will and higher expectations, by a former New York Times New Delhi bureau chief who interweaves data, first-hand accounts and archival research to great effect.
The docu-drama interweaves testimonies from men such as Locklear, who speak about having to keep their sex lives private for fear of being imprisoned and/or treated with chemical aversion therapy to change their sexuality, according to BBC Two.
Set in modern-day New York City, the first season of this serialized drama interweaves 'The Three Little Pigs,' 'Little Red Riding Hood,' and 'Hansel and Gretel' into an epic and subversive tale of love, loss, greed, revenge, and murder.
As this film by Sol Friedman examines what it means to depart from long-held principles, it interweaves Razie's musings with animation and other special effects — most creatively when it reveals that her offscreen interlocutor is a talking pig's head.
Set in modern-day New York City, the first season of this serialized drama interweaves The Three Little Pigs, Little Red Riding Hood, and Hansel and Gretel into an epic and subversive tale of love, loss, greed, revenge, and murder.
A clattering score by the composers Philip Miller and Thuthuka Sibisi (the latter serving as conductor) interweaves modernist motifs with Christian spirituals and with southern and western African modes, while a dancer in a gas mask (Sipho Seroto) keeps watch throughout.
Spotify has also continued to iterate on features designed to enhance the podcast listening experience: The platform rolled out apersonalizedplaylist called "Your Daily Drive" in the US, which interweaves music and podcasts in one playlist, according to the expressed interests of users.
She interweaves this invented book with her own so that the two texts and the two journeys — one by car, meandering and almost desultory; the other speeding forward with the almost locomotive propulsion of suspenseful fiction — seem on their way to a collision.
She was about to start a two-day press tour to promote "Tell the Truth and Shame the Devil," which interweaves her story with that of her son Michael Brown, who was killed by a police officer in Ferguson, Missouri, in 2014.
As with her previous project, Burn the Diaries, a beautifully saturated hybrid text in which Davey deftly integrates and interweaves the writings of Jean Genet, Jean-Paul Sartre, Eileen Myles, Marguerite Duras, John McPhee, and Susan Sontag, among others, 7 Albums gracefully performs a constellating.
The book interweaves beautifully etched flashbacks of Olivia's spirited and troubling adolescence with scenes from the novel's terrifying present: After Olivia returns with her own two children to the beach on the Jersey Shore where she spent her early years, her 9-year-old son, who is bipolar, vanishes.
A memorial to those who lost their lives in 2019 Ms. Bellon directed short films, documentaries and TV series before making the transition to features in 1972 with "Somewhere, Someone," which interweaves stories about the impact of recent modernization on several people in Paris, including an elderly couple.
"WR: Mysteries of the Organism" (on Saturday and March 8), which was first shown in 1971 and received a ban from Yugoslav authorities, interweaves the theories of the psychoanalyst Wilhelm Reich with loosely structured ideas on free love as an antidote to the rigidity of life under Communism.
"Empires of New York" (working title) is a docu-drama series that interweaves the stories of New York City's most powerful icons over the course of the 1980s – revealing how their actions reshaped the city, defined the decade, and forever changed the culture of America as a whole.
These days, now that I've found my particular way of seeing, thanks in large part to the making of my third book, My Dakota — an elegiac work that interweaves my photographs and spare text pieces — I'm more comfortable allowing some of Alex's influence to shine through my work.
In the Story of Marie and Julien Rivette interweaves various cinematic and literary sources—the director purposely references some of his own previous films and the movies The Sixth Sense and The Others, as well Poe and Celtic myth— in an attempt to bring his fictional characters into life.
I love, for example, the gallery devoted to Joan Jonas's work, specifically for the ways it draws connections between various phases of her artistic production, the seemingly endless ways she interweaves drawing, film, poetry, performance, and text, and how experiencing all of this work together generates deeper readings of her work.
Fox thought Bradley might find the footage helpful — and, indeed, the way he masterfully interweaves scenes of Rich as a young mother to a bunch of rambunctious baby boys with present-day scenes of Fox and her grown children results in an extraordinary portrait of a family that has spent decades fighting for justice.
Debut author Joseph Cassara's novel The House of Impossible Beauties interweaves the tale of the notorious House of Xtravaganza —  among the most celebrated "houses" of New York's underground ballroom scene in the 1980s —  with that of its co-founders, Venus and Angie Xtravaganza, countless other transgender individuals and drag queens who came and went, and the looming AIDS crisis.
The film interweaves perspectives from people on land, in air and at sea, through the eyes of, among others, a naval officer (Kenneth Branagh), a civilian boat captain (Mark Rylance), a shellshocked officer (Cillian Murphy), Royal Air Force pilots (Tom Hardy and Jack Lowden), and the central character, a painfully young British soldier played by a relative newcomer, Fionn Whitehead.
More than nine hundred pages long, the novel interweaves the perspectives of dozens of people connected to Frank, including Benedykt Chmielowski, a priest who wrote the first Polish-language encyclopedia; Elisha Schorr, a rabbi who was entranced by Frank's charisma; Moliwda, a Polish nobleman who was Frank's translator, confidant, and eventual betrayer; and a dying Jewish grandmother who swallows a kabbalistic amulet and achieves immortality.
Meanwhile, Moretti's (real-life) wife, Silvia Nono, gives birth to their (real-life) son, Pietro, and the filmmaker interweaves his droll struggles with the basics of parenting and his anger at the state of Italian society (which leads him to interview a group of newly arrived refugees) and, for that matter, at the state of the cinema (in derisive riffs aimed at the Hollywood films "Heat" and "Strange Days").
Sit down with a loved one and read aloud two poems: the miraculous "The Sleepers" (1855), in which Whitman eavesdrops on the slumber of multitudes, alive and dead, and interweaves dreams of his own—at one point joining a merry company of spirits, of whom he says, "I reckon I am their boss, and they make me a pet besides"—and "When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd" (1865), his epic elegy for Abraham Lincoln, in which the President isn't named, even as his loss interpenetrates nature, symbolized by the unearthly song of "the gray-brown bird," a hermit thrush.

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