intermell
English
Etymology
From Old French entremeller.
Verb
intermell (third-person singular simple present intermells, present participle intermelling, simple past and past participle intermelled)
- (archaic) To mix together, intermeddle, intermix.
- 1509, John Fisher, The Funeral Sermon of Margaret, Countess of Richmond and Derby:
- The lyfe of this wretched world whiche is alway entermelled with moche bitternes.
- 1866, J. B. Rose, The Metamorphoses of Ovid. [Translated in Verse.]:
- When Fame, / Ubiquitous, to Dejaneira came— / Fame, who her facts with fictions intermells, / And falsifies the very truths she tells, / And whispered her—"Amphitryonides / Loved Iöle."
- (archaic) To concern oneself with; to interfere.
- 1598, John Marston, The Scourge of Villanie:
- As for the reſt, to ſnort in belly cheere, / To bite, to gnaw, and boldly intermell / With ſacred things, in which thou doſt excell, / Vnforc'd he'le doe.
Anagrams
Scots
Noun
intermell
- (obsolete) a battle fought in close combat
- 1535, William Stewart, The Buik of the croniclis of Scotland:
- And syne or that intermell wes done, / The greit battell on euerie syd did jone, / With sic ane reird quhill all the rochis rang, / So thrafullie togidder that tha thrang.
- (please add an English translation of this quotation)
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