Why this word is great
INTERTEX — [Verb] To weave disparate elements into a coherent, fabric-like whole, especially of texts or ideas. From the Latin intertexere, from inter ("between") and texere ("to weave"). Unlike "intertwine," which suggests a general, often physical, twisting, or "interlace," which emphasizes a crossing, checkered pattern, to intertex is to deliberately craft an integrated unity where seams become substance. It is the novelist threading an ancient myth through a modern plot, the composer binding a folk melody into a symphonic movement, or the familial anecdote repeated until its threads become the lining of personal history—the quiet art of making meaning from borrowed cloth.