Intersperse vs Inlaid - What's the difference?
intersperse | inlaid |
To mix two things irregularly, placing things of one kind among things of other:
* 1991 , Frank Biocca, Television and Political Advertising: Signs, codes, and images , page 76:
# To scatter or insert (something) into or among (other things).
#* 1985 , Jane Y. Murdock, Barbara V. Hartmann, Communication and language intervention program (CLIP) for individuals with moderate to severe handicaps , page 46:
# To place or insert — to diversify by placing or inserting — other things among (something).
(inlay)
(of a design) Set into a surface in a decorative pattern.
(of the surface of an item) Having an inset decorative pattern.
As verbs the difference between intersperse and inlaid
is that intersperse is to mix two things irregularly, placing things of one kind among things of other: while inlaid is (inlay).As an adjective inlaid is
(of a design) set into a surface in a decorative pattern.intersperse
English
Verb
(interspers)- For example, a commercial sequence might intersperse pictures of a senator working in his office with shots of ordinary Americans happily working in various walks of life.
- Mother Nature interspersed a few dandelions among the petunias, but it was a pretty garden, anyway.
- Review tasks are particularly useful to intersperse when students are experiencing considerable failure.
- Mother Nature interspersed the petunias with a few dandelions, but it was a pretty garden, anyway.