Random
Source Code

Intricated

To intricate someone; to bring people on board or to get them onside with an idea or a proposal or an initiative of some type by getting them intricated into the process bit by bit, almost without their noticing that they are making a commitment.

When a group was trying to Bring Back the Ottawa Senators in 1990, a team that had not played in the National Hockey League for nearly 60 years, one of their key advisers, former US Attorney General, Elliot Richardson (now deceased) said: "First we'll get the League’s Board of Governors intricated then we'll get the (expansion) franchise!"

by Prof Bruce March 5, 2009


Intricate

Complex or complicated

It is an extremely intricate system.

by Pacchu Nagari March 4, 2009

66πŸ‘ 12πŸ‘Ž


intrical

A word that doesn't exist. Usually used by dumbasses who really mean to use the word wordintegral/word.

"It's an intrical part..."
"Intrical isn't a word, dumbass"

by Track-10 September 16, 2003

665πŸ‘ 196πŸ‘Ž


intricate

On a broad level it refers to something that is highly complex and involved.

On a more intricate level, it refers to something that has succeeded in the capture of complex details. The kind of details, like subtle mannerisms, that you take for granted in day-to-day life but are like little puzzle pieces that form the world around you, reality. That's why a lot of movies and such never seem truly realistic because they are lacking in the intricacies that inhabit the real-world. But when it happens, it's a good feeling to recognize the intricacies of the real-world successfully captured and portrayed in the fictional realm.

Man, this cartoon I am watching is intricate!

by TimeCrime March 18, 2010

25πŸ‘ 17πŸ‘Ž


intrical

a word that is a mashup of integral and intricate, weaving together both words to form a new meaning.

integral: necessary to the completeness of the whole:

"This point is integral to his plan."

intricate: having many interrelated parts or facets; entangled or involved:

"an intricate maze."

So intrical basically means something that is so important that it cannot be extricated in any way from the whole.

Women became a very intrical part of the Popular Rights Movement.

by Aoren22 April 2, 2011

68πŸ‘ 75πŸ‘Ž


intricately

to taticly plan or in a certain way

he intricately led his squad

by uour welcome November 2, 2017


Intricate

To bring people on board or to get them onside with an idea or a proposal or an initiative of some type by getting them 'intricated' into the process bit by bit, almost without their noticing that they are making a commitment.

When a group was trying to Bring Back the Ottawa Senators in 1990, a team that had not played in the National Hockey League for nearly 60 years, one of their key advisers, former US Attorney General, Elliot Richardson (now deceased) said: "First we'll intricate the League then we'll get the (expansion) franchise!"

by Prof Bruce March 5, 2009

9πŸ‘ 12πŸ‘Ž