Entanglement [noun]

Definition of Entanglement:

complication, predicament

Synonyms of Entanglement:


Opposite/Antonyms of Entanglement:


Sentence/Example of Entanglement:

Unlike so many other dissidents in recent years, Navalny is untainted by any past entanglement with the system he now opposes.

The question of ownership and control also touches other aspects of the entanglement between technology and the food system.

Quantum-computer makers hope they’ll be able to harness entanglement to one day achieve bewilderingly fast, parallel processing power in their machines.

This idea is an example of a proposal by Maldacena and Leonard Susskind of Stanford in 2013 that quantum entanglement can be thought of as a wormhole.

Starring a young Larenz Tate and the incomparable Nia Long, this ’90s rom-dram follows the entanglement of a poet and a photographer — and explores what happens when love is tested.

A bola with three, four, or five weights is most commonly associated with hunting large birds like geese since their hollow bones are particularly vulnerable to strikes and their wings are susceptible to entanglement.

The superpowers of quantum computers rely on holding the qubits—quantum bits—that make them up in exotic quantum states like superposition and entanglement.

Now, on the train west, Mead would remember weeping in Benedict’s arms, parsing her troubled marriage and other romantic entanglements.

We were operating in an environment where the public and Parliament was deeply skeptical about getting involved in these entanglements.

He may, as French fears, have fallen into some fatal entanglement; it may not be possible to restore his health.