MINGLE


Meaning of MINGLE in English

verb

COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES

mingle/mix with the crowd (= join a crowd to be social or in order not to be noticed )

The actors went outside to talk to and mingle with the crowd.

COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS

■ NOUN

crowd

She mingled with the crowds of young, untidy foreigners who lounged around the base of the statue in Piccadilly Circus.

And a short chubby woman with thick pebble-glass spectacles, Mary Dunn, mingled with the crowd .

For a few minutes longer, she mingled with the crowd , exchanging a word here and there.

EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES

Mingling genuine news with gossip, she made a lively companion.

Families mingled and enjoyed themselves at a block party.

Heraklion mingles traditional charm with a bustling centre of pavement cafes and shops.

Playfulness and formality can mingle , even at a wedding.

The noise was tremendous; bombs, guns, and engines mingled in discordant sound.

The smell of the sea mingled with the faint scent of the grass.

Water spread across the floor in a greasy stream, mingling with the pile of filthy rubbish.

EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS

As usual he mingled with his guests, with whom he remained until just after ten o'clock.

Here was a set of fake brass handles incongruously mingled with a different set of pewter fixtures.

Our voices were mingled in poetry.

These four are eternal and are constantly mingling in different proportions and separating.

They come to hear music and end up mingling with a lot of people they may not mingle with in everyday life.

They didn't bite, but they were mingled with ferocious mosquitoes, which did.

Longman DOCE5 Extras English vocabulary.      Дополнительный английский словарь Longman DOCE5.