View example sentences and word forms for Dovetailed.
Dovetailed meaning
Having a dovetail joint. | Involving a wavy line in the form of triangles, resembling a dovetail.
Example sentences (15)
For Widodo, though, the concept dovetailed with his infrastructure-building spree, including several strategic projects slated for East Kalimantan province.
His blockbuster freak shows dovetailed with the rise of urban “ugly laws,” which barred visibly disabled people from appearing in public, except as performers.
His Queens-born resentment of the Manhattan elites dovetailed magically with the class animosity being felt by rural people across the country.
It is perhaps no coincidence that Bailhache-Webb’s time at Brookes has dovetailed almost exactly with the vertiginous rise of the club’s prominence.
Scanlon dovetailed brilliantly with Megan Ormiston inside and the duo managed to subdue the threat of Emma Merriweather who can create havoc if allowed.
The RMRDC initiative is a welcome one as it dovetailed into the programmes, projects and activities of the Council.
And Saint dovetailed between Harlem and California, canvassing new ideas; working.
This dovetailed into conspiracy theories — specifically Marjorie Taylor Greene, who is the heavy favorite to win a congressional seat in a deeply conservative district in Northwest Georgia.
Each shines individually, but it is the combination of their detailed and dovetailed performances that is masterful and moving.
Lessons from the movie dovetailed with the students’ work on a school-wide social contract, in which each grade came up with one-third of a three-part overall commitment to a safe learning environment.
That achievement dovetailed with the state’s broader commitment to rehabilitate and create more affordable housing.
The weak yen policy dovetailed with a synchronized global recovery.
For the Lamtuna leadership, this new ideology dovetailed with their long desire to refound the Sanhaja union and recover their lost dominions.
Her appearances in Jamestown dovetailed with her appearances and speeches as chancellor at The College of William & Mary nearby.
Smeaton designed the third Eddystone Lighthouse (1755–59) where he pioneered the use of ' hydraulic lime ' (a form of mortar which will set under water) and developed a technique involving dovetailed blocks of granite in the building of the lighthouse.