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单词 dissociate
释义

Definition of dissociate in English:

dissociate

verb dɪˈsəʊʃɪeɪtdɪˈsəʊsɪeɪt
[with object]
  • 1(especially in abstract contexts) disconnect or separate.

    the word ‘spiritual’ has become for many dissociated from religion
    Example sentencesExamples
    • It also seems that the cannabis market was partially dissociated from the heroin and cocaine markets, as consumers could now buy hashish without contacting heroin or cocaine sellers.
    • Such fictions gain reality by being dissociated from a single author, by being collectivized.
    • In Europe, the nation-state to an increasing extent has been dissociated from military power, despite the fact that the modern state built on centralized power was born on that continent.
    • While Crain nowhere suggests that some of the major themes of Brown's fiction were merely an extension of his life, he makes it thoroughly clear that they cannot be dissociated from the life.
    • His attempts to depict the view from this building and design his own ‘fairest prospect’ of federalism cannot be dissociated from this dense and layered political symbolism.
    • However, in free-living males, testosterone levels were higher in redder males, suggesting that testosterone is dissociated from dominance status under natural circumstances.
    • Only the means needs to be dissociated from political aims.
    • I was dissociated from it at one level, though I wouldn't say I was distanced.
    • Where policy is radically dissociated from the reality of death, the paradoxical result is a society dominated by the logic of death.
    • The need to think about the environment cannot really be dissociated from the nature of the lives that people, especially deprived people, live today.
    • The viewer himself is the human element in this work, the experiencer, outwardly-gazing, whereas the observer of a sculpted figure is dissociated from their very humanity and represented experience.
    • Some of color plates were completely dissociated from the text.
    • The organism cannot be dissociated from its environment.
    • I could not concentrate and was completely dissociated from my work as well.
    • Interestingly, the Preamble also notes that civil and political rights cannot be dissociated from economic, social, and cultural rights in their conception as well as their universality.
    • The skills are there, the drive is there, the ability is there, but the gatekeepers are too dissociated from their own clients' actual needs to ever let me past.
    • But is it really better to see Campbell in this context, wholly dissociated from those who shared his rise to fame?
    • I learned a lot in the recovery movement about respectful boundaries, effective communication, and accountability, but the recovery movement is dissociated from political context.
    • First, the claim on the bill is generally dissociated from any claim in relation to the underlying transaction.
    • In cells recovering from the inhibition of actin polymerization by latrunculin A, the assembly of actin filaments is dissociated from its linkage to membrane protrusion.
    Synonyms
    separate, detach, disconnect, sever, cut off, divorce, set apart, segregate, distinguish
    isolate, alienate
    1. 1.1dissociate oneself from Declare that one is not connected with or a supporter of (someone or something)
      he took pains to dissociate himself from the religious radicals
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Also, by and large, film-makers are dissociating themselves from the cinema of the 1970s and the 1980s - which was largely escapist - to tackle subjects that are moored in reality.
      • This will enable you to emotionally dissociate yourself from what is happening.
      • It is a strategy which seeks political power by tactically dissociating itself from politics.
      • First, I want to dissociate myself from what I thought were some slightly churlish comments made by a member whose words I usually listen to extremely closely.
      • But victory was thrown away by the Labour leadership, dissociating itself from even a raised fist on a picket line.
      • In a statement yesterday, the Green Party dissociated itself from Mr Barrett as John Gormley TD condemned the activities of far-right political groups.
      • Catholic leaders have not dissociated themselves from the ambivalent statement emanating from last week's funeral in Belfast.
      • In the letter, they say they are writing to dissociate themselves from the Institute's support for a Yes vote in the forthcoming referendum.
      • Rudd dissociated himself from the bombers early on and lived on the run, incognito within the working-class, people he suddenly realised he knew nothing about.
      • Particularly wounding was an open letter to the press by 23 of his colleagues, dissociating themselves from his views on immigration policy.
      • It's a language created by the right, and now frequently circulated by the left as they hasten to endear themselves to middle Australia by dissociating themselves from the unfashionably socially concerned.
      • At last month's meeting, the governing body passed a motion dissociating itself from statements made by Prof Clarke about the Victoria Lodge student accommodation development.
      • The decision was overturned by the European Court of Human Rights only because the journalist had ‘clearly dissociated himself from the persons interviewed.’
      • Geller announced that he had dissociated himself from the two bosses and called on them to leave the club.
      • Too much of ourselves must be deleted when we erase our personal histories and abruptly dissociate ourselves from who we have been’.
      • Collins' healthy longevity is due in part to dissociating herself from what she endearingly calls ‘drains’.
      • One couldn't help, however, be further reminded of how much AFL has seemingly dissociated itself from its grass roots support.
      • The years of terrorism flushed out extremists from the far left and far right parties which dissociated themselves from it.
      • Three cheers for the bishops who are dissociating themselves from this witch-hunt.
      • Having dissociated himself from what we are told was a straightforward political donation, he has little option but to stick to his story.
      Synonyms
      break away from, break off relations with, end relations with, sever connections with
      withdraw from, delink from, quit, leave, disaffiliate from, resign from, pull out of, drop out of, have nothing more to do with, part company with, defect, desert, secede from, take one's leave of, become estranged from
      denounce, disown, reject, condemn, disagree with, wash one's hands of, distance oneself from
    2. 1.2Psychiatry Split off (a component of mental activity) to act as an independent part of mental life.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Each character and object in the dream is a split off or dissociated component of the self - but the dreamer is not fully aware of this.
      • In Freudian terms, one may be as dissociated from the demands of the super-ego as from those of the id.
      • From a dissociated perspective, mental rehearsal allows a person to be more like the editor or director of the play or movie.
      • More commonly, individuals dissociate parts of themselves from their primary relationship.
      • This includes dissociating memories of trauma, hypnotic regression to recover ‘repressed’ memories and the idea that elevated levels of the stress hormone cortisol can shrink the hippocampus, a brain region associated with memory.
  • 2Chemistry
    (with reference to a molecule) split into separate smaller atoms, ions, or molecules, especially reversibly.

    with object these compounds are dissociated by solar radiation to yield atoms of chlorine
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Helicases are protein motors that use the energy of NTP hydrolysis to dissociate the hydrogen bonding between the nucleic acid duplexes and also to disrupt other non-covalent interactions between complementary base pairs.
    • Ideas being considered include the use of hot water or steam flooding to decompose the hydrate, or by using methods that dissociate the gas by reducing reservoir pressure.
    • ‘With laser spark spectroscopy, the higher energy laser beam dissociates the metal-containing molecules and particles into a plasma of atoms and ions,’ notes one researcher.
    • The tissue fragments were dissociated in a drop of 60% acetic acid on a slide and briefly heated on a hotplate.
    • We then, suspended the embryos in 1 M urea and dissociated them by pipetting.

Derivatives

  • dissociative

  • adjective dɪˈsəʊsɪətɪvdɪˈsəʊʃɪətɪv
    • 1Causing disconnection or separation.

      the dissociative force of scepticism has been constantly at work in all of Europe's great ages
      1. 1.1Psychiatry Denoting or relating to a disorder in which normally related mental processes are separated.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Regarding dissociative phenomena, most of these workers focused on degeneration, pathology, and maladjustment and were generally hostile to the concept of normal dissociation.
      • Psychiatric and neurophysiological research and theory development are better directed towards individual components that contribute to dissociative experience.
      • Helen suffers from dissociative identity disorder, or multiple personality disorder, and switches between personas at a second's notice.
      • it is imperative for future research to determine whether dissociative disorders are exclusively related to trauma
      • the dynamics of dissociative electron transfer
    • 2Chemistry
      Causing a molecule to split into separate smaller atoms, ions, or molecules, especially in a way that is reversible.

Origin

Mid 16th century: from Latin dissociat- 'separated', from the verb dissociare, from dis- (expressing reversal) + sociare 'join together' (from socius 'companion').

Rhymes

associate, negotiate
 
 

Definition of dissociate in US English:

dissociate

verb
[with object]
  • 1Disconnect or separate (used especially in abstract contexts)

    voices should not be dissociated from their social context
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The need to think about the environment cannot really be dissociated from the nature of the lives that people, especially deprived people, live today.
    • I was dissociated from it at one level, though I wouldn't say I was distanced.
    • The viewer himself is the human element in this work, the experiencer, outwardly-gazing, whereas the observer of a sculpted figure is dissociated from their very humanity and represented experience.
    • Where policy is radically dissociated from the reality of death, the paradoxical result is a society dominated by the logic of death.
    • The skills are there, the drive is there, the ability is there, but the gatekeepers are too dissociated from their own clients' actual needs to ever let me past.
    • In cells recovering from the inhibition of actin polymerization by latrunculin A, the assembly of actin filaments is dissociated from its linkage to membrane protrusion.
    • First, the claim on the bill is generally dissociated from any claim in relation to the underlying transaction.
    • In Europe, the nation-state to an increasing extent has been dissociated from military power, despite the fact that the modern state built on centralized power was born on that continent.
    • But is it really better to see Campbell in this context, wholly dissociated from those who shared his rise to fame?
    • I learned a lot in the recovery movement about respectful boundaries, effective communication, and accountability, but the recovery movement is dissociated from political context.
    • His attempts to depict the view from this building and design his own ‘fairest prospect’ of federalism cannot be dissociated from this dense and layered political symbolism.
    • Only the means needs to be dissociated from political aims.
    • However, in free-living males, testosterone levels were higher in redder males, suggesting that testosterone is dissociated from dominance status under natural circumstances.
    • The organism cannot be dissociated from its environment.
    • While Crain nowhere suggests that some of the major themes of Brown's fiction were merely an extension of his life, he makes it thoroughly clear that they cannot be dissociated from the life.
    • Interestingly, the Preamble also notes that civil and political rights cannot be dissociated from economic, social, and cultural rights in their conception as well as their universality.
    • Such fictions gain reality by being dissociated from a single author, by being collectivized.
    • I could not concentrate and was completely dissociated from my work as well.
    • It also seems that the cannabis market was partially dissociated from the heroin and cocaine markets, as consumers could now buy hashish without contacting heroin or cocaine sellers.
    • Some of color plates were completely dissociated from the text.
    Synonyms
    separate, detach, disconnect, sever, cut off, divorce, set apart, segregate, distinguish
    1. 1.1dissociate oneself from Declare that one is not connected with or a supporter of (someone or something)
      he took pains to dissociate himself from the religious radicals
      Example sentencesExamples
      • In a statement yesterday, the Green Party dissociated itself from Mr Barrett as John Gormley TD condemned the activities of far-right political groups.
      • The years of terrorism flushed out extremists from the far left and far right parties which dissociated themselves from it.
      • This will enable you to emotionally dissociate yourself from what is happening.
      • But victory was thrown away by the Labour leadership, dissociating itself from even a raised fist on a picket line.
      • Too much of ourselves must be deleted when we erase our personal histories and abruptly dissociate ourselves from who we have been’.
      • It's a language created by the right, and now frequently circulated by the left as they hasten to endear themselves to middle Australia by dissociating themselves from the unfashionably socially concerned.
      • At last month's meeting, the governing body passed a motion dissociating itself from statements made by Prof Clarke about the Victoria Lodge student accommodation development.
      • Particularly wounding was an open letter to the press by 23 of his colleagues, dissociating themselves from his views on immigration policy.
      • In the letter, they say they are writing to dissociate themselves from the Institute's support for a Yes vote in the forthcoming referendum.
      • It is a strategy which seeks political power by tactically dissociating itself from politics.
      • First, I want to dissociate myself from what I thought were some slightly churlish comments made by a member whose words I usually listen to extremely closely.
      • One couldn't help, however, be further reminded of how much AFL has seemingly dissociated itself from its grass roots support.
      • Rudd dissociated himself from the bombers early on and lived on the run, incognito within the working-class, people he suddenly realised he knew nothing about.
      • Three cheers for the bishops who are dissociating themselves from this witch-hunt.
      • Also, by and large, film-makers are dissociating themselves from the cinema of the 1970s and the 1980s - which was largely escapist - to tackle subjects that are moored in reality.
      • Catholic leaders have not dissociated themselves from the ambivalent statement emanating from last week's funeral in Belfast.
      • Collins' healthy longevity is due in part to dissociating herself from what she endearingly calls ‘drains’.
      • Geller announced that he had dissociated himself from the two bosses and called on them to leave the club.
      • The decision was overturned by the European Court of Human Rights only because the journalist had ‘clearly dissociated himself from the persons interviewed.’
      • Having dissociated himself from what we are told was a straightforward political donation, he has little option but to stick to his story.
      Synonyms
      break away from, break off relations with, end relations with, sever connections with
      denounce, disown, reject, condemn, disagree with, wash one's hands of, distance oneself from
    2. 1.2usually be dissociatedPsychiatry Split off (a component of mental activity) to act as an independent part of mental life.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • In Freudian terms, one may be as dissociated from the demands of the super-ego as from those of the id.
      • From a dissociated perspective, mental rehearsal allows a person to be more like the editor or director of the play or movie.
      • This includes dissociating memories of trauma, hypnotic regression to recover ‘repressed’ memories and the idea that elevated levels of the stress hormone cortisol can shrink the hippocampus, a brain region associated with memory.
      • Each character and object in the dream is a split off or dissociated component of the self - but the dreamer is not fully aware of this.
      • More commonly, individuals dissociate parts of themselves from their primary relationship.
  • 2Chemistry
    (with reference to a molecule) split into separate smaller atoms, ions, or molecules, especially reversibly.

    with object these compounds are dissociated by solar radiation to yield atoms of chlorine
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Ideas being considered include the use of hot water or steam flooding to decompose the hydrate, or by using methods that dissociate the gas by reducing reservoir pressure.
    • Helicases are protein motors that use the energy of NTP hydrolysis to dissociate the hydrogen bonding between the nucleic acid duplexes and also to disrupt other non-covalent interactions between complementary base pairs.
    • We then, suspended the embryos in 1 M urea and dissociated them by pipetting.
    • ‘With laser spark spectroscopy, the higher energy laser beam dissociates the metal-containing molecules and particles into a plasma of atoms and ions,’ notes one researcher.
    • The tissue fragments were dissociated in a drop of 60% acetic acid on a slide and briefly heated on a hotplate.

Origin

Mid 16th century: from Latin dissociat- ‘separated’, from the verb dissociare, from dis- (expressing reversal) + sociare ‘join together’ (from socius ‘companion’).

 
 
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更新时间:2024/11/11 16:31:14