English edit

Verb edit

enweave (third-person singular simple present enweaves, present participle enweaving, simple past enwove or enweaved, past participle enwoven or enweaved)

  1. Alternative form of inweave
    • 1998, Fred Dortort, The Dialectic of Vision: A Contrary Reading of William Blake’s Jerusalem (The Clinamen Studies Series), Station Hill Arts, →ISBN, page 259:
      Daughters, rock the cradle, tell me where you found what you have enweaved.
    • 2007, Emily Smith, Triumphant Bodies: Sexual Political Conquest in Women’s Published Writing, 1660-1763, Cambridge Scholars Publishing, →ISBN, page 46:
      By the time of her death in 1689—the same year that William and Mary took the throne—Behn’s Royalist politics had become enweaved in her narratives in ways that varyingly suggested loyalty and disempowerment; []
    • 2016, Tehseen Noorani, “Patterning a World of Mushrooms: Challenges of Co-Production”, in Julian Brigstocke, Tehseen Noorani, editors, Listening With Non-Human Others, ARN Press, →ISBN, page 142:
      Mushrooms have enweaved the rest of us humans and non-humans into their webs of life.