Why this word is great
INWEAVE — [Verb] To weave in or together; to intermix or intertwine by weaving; to interlace. From in- ("into, within") + weave ("to form by interlacing threads"). Unlike "interweave" (which suggests a balanced mingling) or "entwine" (which evokes a loose, serpentine coil), "inweave" implies a deliberate, almost surgical integration—threading one strand into the warp of another. It is the gold filament worked into a medieval tapestry, the whispered secret stitched into a conversation, or the way memory inweaves itself into the present, altering the pattern without breaking the weave. A quiet act of infiltration, leaving the whole forever changed.