FromMiddle English twyn ,twyne ,twin , fromOld English twīn ( “ double thread, twist, twine, linen-thread, linen ” ) , fromProto-West Germanic *twiʀn ( “ thread, twine ” ) , fromProto-Indo-European *dwisnós ( “ double ” ) , from*dwóh₁ ( “ two ” ) .
twine (countable anduncountable ,plural twines )
Atwist ; aconvolution . A strongthread composed of two or three smaller threads or strands twisted together, and used for various purposes, as for binding small parcels, making nets, and the like; a small cord or string.1911 ,Anna Botsford Comstock ,Handbook of Nature Study , 24th edition, published1939 ,pages120–121 :The orioles like to build the framework oftwine , and it is marvelous how they will loop this around a twig almost as evenly knotted as if crocheted[ …]
The act of twining or winding round. Intimate and suggestive dance gyrations.1965 ,Wilson Pickett ,Don't Fight It (blues song), BMI Music.The way you jerk, the way you do thetwine / You're too much, baby; I'd like to make you mine [...] ( threads or strands twisted together ) : sinew a twist; a convolution
Bulgarian:витка f ( vitka ) ,извивка (bg) f ( izvivka ) Catalan:torsió (ca) m ,circumvolució (ca) m Czech:provázání n French:torsion (fr) f ,convolution (fr) f Galician:touliña f ,erre (gl) m ,empeno m ,tolondro m ,torcedela f ,repulgo m German:Windung (de) f ,Verschlingung f ,Drehung (de) f ,Ranke (de) f ,Wicklung f Irish:sníomh m Latin:spacus m Mongolian:эрч (mn) ( erč ) ,мушгиа (mn) ( mušgia ) Occitan:convolucion f ,torcedura f ,torcement m ,torsion f ,torcida f ,torcit m Romanian:răsucire (ro) f Russian:сплете́ние (ru) n ( spleténije ) Scottish Gaelic:snìomh m Spanish:circunvolución (es) f ,torsión f
strong thread
Bulgarian:връв (bg) f ( vrǎv ) ,канап (bg) m ( kanap ) Catalan:cordill (ca) m Chinese:Mandarin:合股線 / 合股线 (zh) ( hégǔ xiàn ) Czech:provázek (cs) m ,motouz (cs) m Danish:snor (da) c ,sejlgarn Dutch:twijn (nl) m ,tweern (nl) m Estonian:niit (et) Faroese:tvein n Finnish:naru (fi) French:ficelle (fr) f Galician:baraza f ,brenza f ,lía f ,atume m ,liña (gl) f German:Kordel (de) f ,Zwirn (de) m ,Schnur (de) f Hebrew:חוּט מְשִׁיחָה (he) m ( khut meshikha ) Hungarian:spárga (hu) ,zsinór (hu) ,madzag (hu) Ingrian:šnurkka Irish:ruóg f ,sreangán m Italian:spago (it) Malayalam:നൂല് ( nūlŭ ) Māori:tuaina Middle English:twyn Navajo:tłʼóół Norwegian:snor Occitan:crodèl m ,cordèla f Polish:dratwa (pl) f Portuguese:cordel (pt) m ,barbante (pt) m Romanian:șnur (ro) n Russian:бечёвка (ru) f ( bečóvka ) ,шпага́т (ru) m ( špagát ) Slovak:motuz, špagát Spanish:cordel (es) m ,cuerda (es) f ,guita (es) f Swedish:bindtråd c ,bindgarn c ,säcksnöre n ,garn (sv) n Tagalog:lani Turkish:Ottoman Turkish:سجیم ( sicim ) Ukrainian:шпага́т m ( špahát ) ,шворка f ( švorka ) Yup'ik:pelacinak
the act of twining
Bulgarian:извиване (bg) n ( izvivane ) ,усукване (bg) n ( usukvane ) Catalan:entrellaçar (ca) ,trenar (ca) Czech:provázání n Galician:enfronzar ,enfrouzar ,embiar German:Winden (de) n ,Verdrehen n ,Zwirnen (de) n ,Verschlingen n ,Verwinden n ,Wickeln (de) n ,Verzwirnen n Irish:sníomh m Latvian:šķeterēt (lv) Russian:сплете́ние (ru) n ( spleténije ) ,скру́чивание (ru) n ( skrúčivanije ) Scottish Gaelic:snìomh m Spanish:entrelazar (es)
FromMiddle English twinen ,twynen , fromOld English *twīnian ( “ to twine, thread ” ) , fromProto-Germanic *twiznōną ( “ to thread ” ) , fromProto-Indo-European *dwisnós ( “ double ” ) , fromProto-Indo-European *dwóh₁ ( “ two ” ) . Cognate withDutch twijnen ( “ to twine, contort, throw ” ) ,Danish tvinde ( “ to twist ” ) ,Swedish tvinna ( “ to twist, twine, throw ” ) ,Icelandic tvinna ( “ to merge, twine ” ) .
twine (third-person singular simple present twines ,present participle twining ,simple past and past participle twined )
( transitive ) Toweave together.Synonyms: betwine ,entwine ,intertwine ;see also Thesaurus:intertwine ( transitive ) To wind, as one thread around another, or as any flexible substance around another body.c. 1608–1609 (date written) ,William Shakespeare , “The Tragedy of Coriolanus ”, inMr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies [ … ] (First Folio ), London: [ … ] Isaac Iaggard , andEd[ ward] Blount , published1623 ,→OCLC ,[ Act IV, scene v] :Let metwine Mine arms about that body[ …]
( transitive ) To wind about; to embrace; toentwine .( intransitive ) To mutually twist together; to become mutually involved; tointertwine .1941 ,Emily Carr , chapter 1, inKlee Wyck [2] :Usually some old crone was squatted on the earth floor, weaving cedar fibre or tatters of old cloth into a mat, her claw-like fingerstwining in and out, in and out, among the strands that were fastened to a crude frame of sticks.
( intransitive ) To wind; to bend; to make turns; tomeander .1713 ,Jonathan Swift ,Cadenus and Vanessa [3] :As rivers, though they bend andtwine , Still to the sea their course incline:
( intransitive ) Toascend inspiral lines about asupport ; toclimb spirally.Many plantstwine .
( obsolete ) To turn round; torevolve .1598 ,George Chapman ,Hero and Leander :dancers twine midst cedar-fragrant glades
( obsolete ) To change the direction of.1600 ,Torquato Tasso , translated byEdward Fairfax ,Jerusalem Delivered [4] , published1581 , Book 20, Stanza 38:For where he turned his sword, ortwined his steed, He slew, or man and beast on earth down laid,
( obsolete ) To mingle; to mix.1646 ,Richard Crashaw ,M. Crashaw’s Answer for Hope [5] , lines29–30 :As lumpes of sugar loose themselues, andtwine Their subtile essence with the soul of wine.
to wind, as one thread around another, or as any flexible substance around another body
to wind about; to embrace; to entwine
—see entwine to mutually twist together; to become mutually involved; to intertwine
—see intertwine twine (third-person singular simple present twines ,present participle twining ,simple past and past participle twined )
Alternative form oftwin ( “ to separate ” ) .FromMiddle English tweyne , fromOld English twēġen , fromProto-West Germanic *twai- . Cognate withEnglish twain .
twine
two Synonym: twy Jacob Poole (d. 1827) (before 1828), William Barnes, editor,A Glossary, With some Pieces of Verse, of the old Dialect of the English Colony in the Baronies of Forth and Bargy, County of Wexford, Ireland , London: J. Russell Smith, published1867 ,page73