They interpenetrate and a change in one affects all the others.
2
It works both ways, too; art and life interpenetrate each other.
3
These two principles reappear and interpenetrate all things, all thought; the one, the many.
4
Whatever be its solution, all the individual phases mutually extend and interpenetrate one another.
5
We see also that they have an analogy with one another, and that in Mathematics they often interpenetrate.
6
All was so still that sleep seemed to interpenetrate the structure, causing the very moonlight to look discordantly awake.
7
And the situation becomes complicated when the historical periods interpenetrate, as your Hamiltonian era and the Hruntan Empire have interpenetrated.
8
The psychology of religion should interpenetrate his historical learning; the best methods of pedagogy should guide his approach to men.
9
We know that the region of the bodily limbs is that in which physical, etheric and astral forces interpenetrate most deeply.
10
Each atom is surrounded by a field, formed of the atoms of the four higher planes, which surround and interpenetrate it.
11
In a chemical combination the different substances interpenetrate and are lost in one another: they are not mechanically separable nor individually distinguishable.
12
And all this mixes with your most mystic mood; so that fact and fancy, half-way meeting, interpenetrate, and form one seamless whole.
13
But in us the animal and the human interpenetrate in every feature, in every curve of the body, and with infinite variety.
14
It seemed instead to interpenetrate the arm-asthough bone and flesh were spectral, without power to dislodge the shining particles from position.
15
Indeed, they interpenetrate to such a degree that even the use of the word "state" is apt to be misleading.
16
Professor Dowden has also laid stress upon the harmonious balance of Wordsworth's nature, his different faculties seeming to interpenetrate one another, and yield mutual support.