List of synonyms from "interknit" to synonyms from "intern"
Discover all the synonyms available for the terms intermingle, intermix, intermeddling, interlude, intern and many more. Click on one of the words below and go directly to the synonyms associated with it.
- Interknit
- Interlace
- Interline
- Interlocking directorate
- Interlocutor
- Interlope
- Interlude
- Intermeddle
- Intermeddling
- Intermediacy
- Intermediary
- Intermediate
- Intermediate frequency
- Intermediate range ballistic missile
- Interment
- Interminable
- Intermingle
- Intermission
- Intermit
- Intermitted
- Intermittence
- Intermittently
- Intermix
- Intern
Definition of the day : « intern »
- noun apprentice
- I would recommend her to an intern, who is under great obligations to me.
- Extract from : « Germinie Lacerteux » by Edmond and Jules de Goncourt
- Eight years of school and two more as an intern were worth at least that.
- Extract from : « The Lani People » by J. F. Bone
- Our fears coming uppermost, we gave voice to them: "Intern?"
- Extract from : « The Escape of a Princess Pat » by George Pearson
- In the list of birds now fully extinct, in the Proceedings of the Fourth Intern.
- Extract from : « Extinct Birds » by Walter Rothschild
- They ought to intern everyone who's the least bit under suspicion.
- Extract from : « The Head Girl at the Gables » by Angela Brazil
- The intern was examining his face with a strong flashlight beam.
- Extract from : « The Flying Stingaree » by Harold Leland Goodwin
- He was, as it were, an intern practising the surgery of the law.
- Extract from : « McAllister and His Double » by Arthur Train
- The reporter—a summer intern—was the only person to respond to his all-fluff press release on the open network.
- Extract from : « Someone Comes to Town, Someone Leaves Town » by Cory Doctorow
- They experienced a training comparable to the clinical instruction gained by an intern in a modern hospital.
- Extract from : « Frank H. Nelson of Cincinnati » by Warren C. Herrick
- Miss Cavell assisted these soldiers to escape into a neutral country which was bound, if possible, to apprehend and intern them.
- Extract from : « A Journal From Our Legation in Belgium » by Hugh Gibson
