What Google Analytics does make use of is cookie sharing. Cookie sharing is a tracking technique most often used by third-party analytics services. It can also help trackers sidestep restrictions on third-party cookies, like Safari’s Intelligent Tracking Protection (ITP) and Firefox’s default content blocking.
It works like this: When you visit a website, the page loads a piece of JavaScript from a third-party server. That JavaScript runs in a first-party context and sets a cookie associated with the first-party domain, like “example .com.” Your browser allows the third-party JavaScript (running as part of the first-party page) to read and update the cookie. Then, the JavaScript sends off a request to the third-party tracker. Normally, cookies are automatically sent alongside requests, and the browser controls who sees what cookies—it wouldn’t allow a first-party cookie to be sent to a third party like Google. However, since Google’s script is able to access the cookie, it can stick the cookie value right into the request itself (specifically, into the “query string” portion of the request). Google receives the identifier from the first-party cookie and uses it to link the request back to a user profile.
https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2019/07/sharpening-our-claws-teaching-privacy-badger-fight-more-third-party-trackers