dissect
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++LDOCE 5++dis·sect /dɪˈsekt, daɪ-/ verb [transitive] 1. MSEto cut up the body of a dead animal or person in order to study it 解剖〔动物或人的尸体〕2 EXAMINEto examine something carefully in order to understand it 剖析,仔细分析〔某事物〕 books in which the lives of famous people are dissected 剖析名人生平的书籍3 to divide an area of land into several smaller pieces 把〔田地〕分成小块 fields dissected by small streams 被小溪分成小块的田地 —dissection /-ˈsekʃən/ noun [countable, uncountable]→ See Verb table
Examples from the Corpus
dissect• It remained the chief subject of the editorial pages, dissected and analyzed ceaselessly.• The specimens were carefully dissected and examined under a microscope.• The book dissects historical data to show how Napoleon ran his army.• He would rather dissect human emotions at the most personal level.• These fan deposits extend into the mountain valleys and have been dissected into terraces by occasional floods emerging from those valleys.• You kind of dissect it and write grammar stuff.• Newspaper headlines, radio talk shows and magazine pieces dissected its operations.• Tiger's game should not be dissected, merely admired.• But it is possible to dissect most crises and examine each component in turn.Origin dissect (1500-1600) Latin dissectus, from secare “to cut”dis·sect verbChineseSyllable
body Corpus to up a cut the of
dissect
dis‧sect /dɪˈsekt, daɪ-/
verb [transitive]
2. to examine something carefully in order to understand it:
books in which the lives of famous people are dissected
3. to divide an area of land into several smaller pieces:
fields dissected by small streams
—dissection /-ˈsekʃən/ noun [uncountable and countable]
dis‧sect /dɪˈsekt, daɪ-/
verb [transitive] Date: 1500-1600
Language: Latin
Origin: dissectus, from secare 'to cut'
1. to cut up the body of a dead animal or person in order to study itLanguage: Latin
Origin: dissectus, from secare 'to cut'
2. to examine something carefully in order to understand it:
3. to divide an area of land into several smaller pieces:
—dissection /-ˈsekʃən/ noun [uncountable and countable]