to mingle with the crowd
111elbow — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) n. bend, angle, dogleg. See angularity, convexity. v. jab, poke; push, prod, shove; jostle, make one s way through. See impulse. II (Roget s IV) n. Syn. joint, bend, ulna, turn, half turn, crook, angle,… …
112Noizemag — noiZe Magazine noiZe mag issue 57, fall 2008 Editor in Chief Steve Weinstein Categories Gay Lifestyle Magazine …
113Erasmus Darwin — Portrait of Erasmus Darwin von Joseph Wright of Derby (1792) …
114Bashir Mirza — (1941 2000). Born in Amristar in 1941, a Tonga makers son, B.M. manage to climb the ladder to fame. He made it to the Mayo School of Art (NCA). Where he was one of the special favourites of the great Shakir Ali. A product of the swinging sixties …
115among — a•mong [[t]əˈmʌŋ[/t]] prep. 1) in, into, or through the midst of; surrounded by: She was among friends[/ex] 2) in the midst of, so as to influence: missionary work among the local people[/ex] 3) with a share for each of: Divide the fruit among… …
116Among — A*mong , Amongst A*mongst , prep. [OE. amongist, amonges, amonge, among, AS. onmang, ongemang, gemang, in a crowd or mixture. For the ending st see {Amidst}. See {Mingle}.] 1. Mixed or mingled; surrounded by. [1913 Webster] They heard, And from… …
117Amongst — Among A*mong , Amongst A*mongst , prep. [OE. amongist, amonges, amonge, among, AS. onmang, ongemang, gemang, in a crowd or mixture. For the ending st see {Amidst}. See {Mingle}.] 1. Mixed or mingled; surrounded by. [1913 Webster] They heard, And… …
118unite — Synonyms and related words: accord, accouple, accumulate, act in concert, act together, add, adhere, affiliate, agglutinate, agree, ally, amalgamate, amass, approach, arrange a match, articulate, assemble, assimilate, associate, band, band… …
119among — also amongst preposition Etymology: among from Middle English, from Old English on gemonge, from on + gemonge, dative of gemong crowd, from ge (associative prefix) + mong (akin to Old English mengan to mix); amongst from Middle English amonges,… …
120Huddle — Hud dle, v. t. 1. To crowd (things) together to mingle confusedly; to assemble without order or system. [1913 Webster] Our adversary, huddling several suppositions together, . . . makes a medley and confusion. Locke. [1913 Webster] 2. To do, make …