Mingled can be categorized as a verb.
Verb |
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mingle - get involved or mixed-up with; "He was about to mingle in an unpleasant affair" | ||
mingle - to bring or combine together or with something else; "resourcefully he mingled music and dance" | ||
mingle - be all mixed up or jumbled together; "His words jumbled" |
# | Sentence | ||
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1. | verb | Joy was mingled with sorrow. | |
2. | verb | He had a look that mingled fright with surprise. | |
3. | verb | She had never mingled in the society of women. | |
4. | verb | Never do we taste perfect joy: our happiest successes are mingled with sadness. | |
5. | verb | Everywhere there were mingled the luxury of the wealthy man of taste and the careless untidiness of the bachelor. | |
6. | verb | "O happy ye, whose walls already rise!" / Exclaimed AEneas, and with envious eyes / looked up where pinnacles and roof-tops showed / the new-born city; then in wondrous wise, / clothed in the covering of the friendly cloud, / passed through the midst unseen, and mingled with the crowd. | |
7. | verb | "Here camped the brave Dolopians, there was set / the tent of fierce Achilles; yonder lay / the fleet, and here the rival armies met / and mingled." | |
8. | verb | Guests mingled at the wedding reception. | |
9. | verb | Thus, although their mutual affection seemed to increase rather than to be diminished as their characters opened more fully on each other, the feelings of each were mingled with some less agreeable ingredients. | |
10. | verb | He was about to mingle in an unpleasant affair. | |
11. | verb | and most correctly, us visitors did not mingle with the native wildlife. | |
12. | verb | Mingle your joys sometimes with your earnest occupation. | |
13. | verb | The colors don't mingle well. | |
14. | verb | He doesn't mingle with the villagers. | |
15. | verb | East and West / he summoned to his throne, and thus his wrath expressed. / "What pride of birth possessed you, Earth and air / without my leave to mingle in affray, / and raise such hubbub in my realm?" |
Sentence | |
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verb | |
Joy was mingled with sorrow. | |
He had a look that mingled fright with surprise. | |
She had never mingled in the society of women. | |
Never do we taste perfect joy: our happiest successes are mingled with sadness. | |
Everywhere there were mingled the luxury of the wealthy man of taste and the careless untidiness of the bachelor. | |
"O happy ye, whose walls already rise!" / Exclaimed AEneas, and with envious eyes / looked up where pinnacles and roof-tops showed / the new-born city; then in wondrous wise, / clothed in the covering of the friendly cloud, / passed through the midst unseen, and mingled with the crowd. | |
"Here camped the brave Dolopians, there was set / the tent of fierce Achilles; yonder lay / the fleet, and here the rival armies met / and mingled." | |
Guests mingled at the wedding reception. | |
Thus, although their mutual affection seemed to increase rather than to be diminished as their characters opened more fully on each other, the feelings of each were mingled with some less agreeable ingredients. | |
He was about to mingle in an unpleasant affair. |
|
and most correctly, us visitors did not mingle with the native wildlife. |
|
Mingle your joys sometimes with your earnest occupation. | |
The colors don't mingle well. | |
He doesn't mingle with the villagers. | |
East and West / he summoned to his throne, and thus his wrath expressed. / "What pride of birth possessed you, Earth and air / without my leave to mingle in affray, / and raise such hubbub in my realm?" |