INTERSTICE Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster Interstices are the cracks and crevices of life, and the word is often used for both the literal and figurative gaps of the world In modern uses, interstice can even refer to gaps in time or to special niches in the larger expanse of something else
INTERSTICE | definition in the Cambridge English Dictionary Dual authority created jurisdictional overlaps or interstices and increased the potential for conflict between military and civil administrators, thus complicating daily governance
interstice - Wiktionary, the free dictionary interstice (plural interstices) A small opening or space between objects, especially adjacent objects or objects set closely together, such as between cords in a rope, components of a multiconductor electrical cable or atoms in a crystal
interstices - WordReference. com Dictionary of English a small or narrow space or interval between things or parts, esp when one of a series of alternating uniform spaces and parts: the interstices between the slats of a fence
Interstices - definition of interstices by The Free Dictionary A space, especially a small or narrow one, between things or parts: "There is a gleam of luminous gold, where the sinking western sun has found a first direct interstice in the clouds" (John Fowles)
Interstice Definition Meaning | Britannica Dictionary Britannica Dictionary definition of INTERSTICE [count] formal : a small space that lies between things : a small break or gap in something — usually plural the interstices [= cracks] of between the bricks
Mind the gaps! A research agenda for urban interstices It has been argued that urban interstices cannot be reduced to their morphological characteristics (Brighenti, 2013: xviii) 3 Nevertheless, the interstices of urban sprawl are distributed so as to demand an analytical perspective that speaks to multiple geogra-phical scales