Definitions

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • verb Simple past tense and past participle of interfuse.

Etymologies

Sorry, no etymologies found.

Support

Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word interfused.

Examples

  • "interfused" with the world, which is full of stubborn distinctness, but permeating it through and through, "curled inextricably round about" all its beauty and its power, [92] "intertwined" with earth's lowliest existence, and thrilling with answering rapture to every throb of life.

    Robert Browning 1892

  • For Dorothy, the two are interfused in her scrutiny of nature and in her closeness to her brother, the Romantic poet William Wordsworth.

    New Ways Of Portraying Lives Lyndall Gordon 2011

  • His wordcraft is so integrated, so thoroughly interfused into our speech, so much a part of the sound we make, we are hardly aware of it.

    David Teems: The Other English William David Teems 2012

  • His wordcraft is so integrated, so thoroughly interfused into our speech, so much a part of the sound we make, we are hardly aware of it.

    David Teems: The Other English William David Teems 2012

  • His wordcraft is so integrated, so thoroughly interfused into our speech, so much a part of the sound we make, we are hardly aware of it.

    David Teems: The Other English William David Teems 2012

  • His wordcraft is so integrated, so thoroughly interfused into our speech, so much a part of the sound we make, we are hardly aware of it.

    David Teems: The Other English William David Teems 2012

  • The Blue Flower is a study of just how the ideal in love might be interfused with the real, and the real with the ideal.

    Love in literature 2011

  • From that interfused matrix emerged faith, albeit one without a name or denomination.

    After Life, Nothing? 2010

  • Great Regulars: Enough people, I think, have experienced this "sense sublime/Of something far more deeply interfused" that "rolls through all things"--to borrow from Wordsworth--that it ought not to be dismissed out of hand because it is not subject to scientific verification.

    Archive 2009-04-01 Rus Bowden 2009

  • They are historically contingent, existing only in their specific forms at specific times and places, with biology and society interfused.

    The Special Forces Rebels 2006

Comments

Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.