英:[dɪ'sektɪd]
美:[dɪ'sektɪd]
英:[dɪ'sektɪd]
美:[dɪ'sektɪd]
adj.
切开的,分割的,(叶子)多裂的
v.
解剖(动物等)( dissect的过去式和过去分词 )
仔细分析或研究
dis·sect·ed
daI sek tihd
词根:dissect
n.dissection 解剖,切开;解剖体;详细查究
vi.dissect 进行解剖;进行详细分析
vt.dissect 切细;仔细分析
adjective
in botany, containing or consisting of many sections or parts, as some leaves.
formed into numerous valleys and hills, as by erosion.
cut apart, esp. for examination, as in the study of anatomy.
The first known use of dissected was in 1652
1 He rarely posts on social media or gives interviews, afraid his every word will be dissected by the Polish media and fans.
2 They are often used in intelligence tests, and their origins are pedagogical: The earliest wooden puzzles, from the 18th century, were dissected maps meant to teach geography to the children of aristocrats.
3 It must be astronomically uncomfortable to have one’s private behaviors dissected in public.
4 He sticks their various dissected parts on the shield.
5 It’s tempting to view this last admission in light of “Mad Men,” a show that was endlessly dissected by a cottage industry of recappers and faced both ecstatic praise and harsh criticism.
6 Developers now expect their games to be dissected and criticized.
7 The rhythm supports a two-part melody: an upward-moving dissected chord is the main motif, a screaming arpeggio sequence its companion.
8 They are sliced and pickled for artistic effect or uncannily dissected and plasticized, with every blood vessel visible.
9 Listing 5 can be dissected as follows.
可以对清单5进行如下分析。
10 For Mr. Lanz those comments dealt a serious blow, much dissected in the German news media.
11 The overarching sense is that you’re hearing and viewing this well-known album through a kaleidoscope, the songs fragmented and dissected.
12 His 2010 book “The Big Short” dissected how a handful of renegades foresaw the collapse of the housing market, while everyone else was pouring money into subprime mortgages.
13 Half a century later, it’s still imitated, dissected and mythologized.
14 It was performed into a dissected VHS deck with the motor running super slowly, so you can hear all the pockmarks, the dropouts on the tape.
15 It gets posted, dissected and there is disagreement, usually along racial lines, as to what happened, what it means and, most especially, what role race played.
16 As the very avatars of middlebrow American culture in the second half of the 20th century, Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II have had their lives and work examined, appraised and dissected with wearying regularity.
17 It is a previously unreported chapter in the biography of a public figure whose life has been dissected for decades.
18 The Yams are the largest of eight collectives in a show whose demographics are always dissected for how they reflect the contemporary-art scene.
19 He went to the Leiden Medical School, because he wanted to see how you dissected bodies.
他去了莱顿医学院,他想看看如何解剖人体?
20 Mel Magazine, an online journal quick to note new cultural trends, deeply dissected the resurgence in October.