英:[fræɡˈmentɪd]
美:[ ˈfræɡmentɪd]
英:[fræɡˈmentɪd]
美:[ ˈfræɡmentɪd]
frag·ment·ed
fraeg men tihd
词根:fragment
adj.fragmentary 碎片的;不完全的;断断续续的
fragmental 破片的,碎片的;不完全的,零碎的
n.fragment 碎片;片断或不完整部分
fragmentation 破碎;分裂;[计] 存储残片
vi.fragment 破碎或裂开
fragmentize 分裂
vt.fragment 使成碎片
fragmentize 分裂;裂成碎片
adjective
broken or separated into distinct parts The reality seems to be that the global audience for movies has become increasingly diverse and fragmented, which runs against Hollywood's obsession with finding that magic common denominator.—Peter Bart
Another fragmented language group is the Austroasiatic family, whose most widely spoken languages are Vietnamese and Cambodian.—Jared Diamond
computing having related or associated pieces of stored data disorganized in a way that makes them more difficult to access You probably won't notice a marked performance boost unless your hard drive is extremely fragmented.—Doug Stanley
Fragmented files require much more work to read than contiguous files, because to do so DOS must chase down each sector, possibly moving the disk head back and forth many times. Each of these … slows the task at hand and results in additional wear and tear on your hard disk.—Brett Glass
fragment length polymorphism片段长度多态性
restriction fragment限制酶断片
rock fragment岩屑,岩石碎块
fragment ion碎片离子
The first known use of fragmented was circa 1817
1 Reassembling fragmented cultures is another.
重新组织文化碎片则是另一个。
2 But both artists sublimate grief into mute, fragmented forms.
3 “Broken Scherzo: Tripping Up, Falling Down,” the second movement, is even more jumpy and fragmented, with skittish bursts that suggest both jazzy improvisation and ethereal Messiaen.
4 The old rules had changed, fragmented, broken into bits.
5 Elsewhere, though, the static and buzz of photography's uncertain future was the loudest, most distracting background noise in a curiously fragmented festival.
6 However, they are fragmented by geography and by ecology: the Isthmus of Panama, only 40 miles wide, virtually transects the Americas geographically, as do the isthmus’s Darien rain forests and the northern Mexican desert ecologically.
7 “The information that is out there is so fragmented; it’s also so confusing,” he said, adding that freedom of movement is a pillar of European identity.
8 Mr. Taylor doesn’t so much juggle the movie’s various parts — including a fragmented timeline, a device that here is nothing but empty mannerism — as lob them at the screen.
9 One of post-dubstep's bright lights is Mount Kimbie … Their debut album pushes the sound into lonely, fragmented places, but locates pockets of warmth.
10 Meg Madison hand-stitches fragmented lines into her photographs, accentuating directional movement or echoing some shape within, forcing a simultaneous read of each print as both image and surface.
11 We became surrounded by fragmented and mixed up images of But the managed world says that everything must stay as it is.
12 They found that men in the nut group had sperm with less fragmented DNA.
13 And the mishap that has immobilized him leaves Mike psychologically fragmented, unable to reconcile himself to the loss of a former identity or begin to assemble a new one.
14 Someone who has a little bit of a problem with fragmented sentences and accidental self-disclosures.
15 It’s a loaded word, obviously, but I think it’s the best way to describe the religious landscape in America today: Diverse, fragmented, polarized, and yet Christ-haunted all the same.
16 They’re stylistically different: “Killer of Sheep” unfolds in fragmented vignettes; “Bless Their Little Hearts” has a straightforward narrative.
17 “We have a fragmented vision of history—when we discover a new fragment, we revise history.”
18 That startling, unpleasant image reignites the uncertainty and fear that rise in Marta like bile, as her fragmented memories struggle to focus.
19 The only thing that seems to be binding Inland's fragmented society together is a form of government called "the mincery", which acts as church and state together.
20 The door, meagerly, opened and he saw within the apartment a fragmented and misaligned shrinking figure, a girl who cringed and slunk away and yet held onto the door, as if for physical support.