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!"
9π 12π
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"
665π 196π
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 Leagueβs Board of Governors intricated then we'll get the (expansion) franchise!"
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!
25π 17π
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.
68π 75π