intertexture
Etymology
From inter- + texture.
intertexture means the act of interweaving, or the state of being interwoven. Lexicurio rates it Sui generis — a strength score of 87 out of 100.
Why this word is great
INTERTEXTURE — [Noun] The act of interweaving or the state of being interwoven; also, that which is interwoven. From Latin inter- ("between") + texture ("woven structure"), from Latin textura ("weaving"). Unlike "texture" (which describes a surface's tactile grain) or "fabric" (which names the finished cloth), "intertexture" evokes the dynamic crossing of threads—the loom's rhythmic click and pull, the warp and weft tightening into cohesion. It is the way ivy stitches itself through a chain-link fence, the slow braiding of rivers into a delta, or the invisible weave of voices in a crowded room, each strand holding the others in place. To notice intertexture is to see the world as a thing endlessly being made.
noun
- The act of interweaving, or the state of being interwoven.
- That which is interwoven.“knit in nice intertexture”