From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishinterweavein‧ter‧weave /ˌɪntəˈwiːv $ -ər-/ verb (past tense interwove /-ˈwəʊv $ -ˈwoʊv/, past participle interwoven /-ˈwəʊvən $ -ˈwoʊ-/) [transitive usually passive] 1 CONNECTED WITHif two things are interwoven, they are closely related or combined in a complicated wayclosely/inextricably/tightly etc interwoven The two themes are inextricably interwoven in the book.be interwoven with something practical help for the bereaved interwoven with emotional support2 JOIN something TOGETHERto weave two or more things togetherbe interwoven with something silk interwoven with gold and silver threadsGrammar Interweave is usually passive.→ See Verb table
Examples from the Corpus
interweave• "Poison" is three interwoven stories in one.• The silk is interwoven with gold and silver threads.• The modern music is interwoven with hits from the 1920s.be interwoven with something• Too bad the yarn is interwoven with illogic, inconsistency and outright balderdash.• The whole is interwoven with narrow gauge tramways for transporting the harvest to the crushing plant.be interwoven with something• Too bad the yarn is interwoven with illogic, inconsistency and outright balderdash.• The whole is interwoven with narrow gauge tramways for transporting the harvest to the crushing plant.