| 释义 | 
		exciseex‧cise2 /ɪkˈsaɪz/ verb [transitive]    excise2Origin: 1500-1600 Latin past participle of excidere  ‘to cut out’, from caedere  ‘to cut’  VERB TABLEexcise |
 | Present | I, you, we, they | excise |   | he, she, it | excises |  | Past | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | excised |  | Present perfect | I, you, we, they | have excised |   | he, she, it | has excised |  | Past perfect | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | had excised |  | Future | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | will excise |  | Future perfect | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | will have excised |  
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 | Present | I | am excising |   | he, she, it | is excising |   | you, we, they | are excising |  | Past | I, he, she, it | was excising |   | you, we, they | were excising |  | Present perfect | I, you, we, they | have been excising |   | he, she, it | has been excising |  | Past perfect | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | had been excising |  | Future | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | will be excising |  | Future perfect | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | will have been excising |  
    - Offensive scenes were excised from the film.
 
 - C, the petiole of the cotyledon was chilled as in B, and the cotyledon was then excised.
 - From the point of view of the present, the past has to be excised.
 - It was as if the operation had excised her will to live.
 - Now he could no more excise it from his brain cells than he could sever his past from his future.
 - That homosexuality has been excised as an official disease state is certainly good news.
 - The audio is livelier than the hard-copy edition, which is so slim that little was excised for the audio presentation.
 - The television age has transformed the conventions into presentational exercises from which the unknown and unexpected are ruthlessly excised.
 - Therefore, to excise it would not imply any reversal of Britain's opt-out.
 
    formal to remove or get rid of something, especially by cutting it out:   The tumour was excised.—excision /ɪkˈsɪʒən/ noun [countable, uncountable]  |