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anatomize
[ uh-nat-uh-mahyz ]
verb (used with object)
- to cut apart (an animal or plant) to show or examine the position, structure, and relation of the parts; display the anatomy of; dissect.
- to examine in great detail; analyze minutely:
The couple anatomized their new neighbor.
anatomize
/ 蓹藞苍忙迟蓹藢尘补瑟锄 /
verb
- to dissect (an animal or plant)
- to examine in minute detail
Derived Forms
- 补藞苍补迟辞藢尘颈锄别谤, noun
- 补藢苍补迟辞尘颈藞锄补迟颈辞苍, noun
Other 亚洲网紅露点 Forms
- 补路苍补迟顎僶路尘颈锄顎卆路产濒别 adjective
- 补路苍补迟顎卭路尘颈路锄补顎僼颈辞苍 noun
- 补路苍补迟顎僶路尘颈锄顎卐谤 noun
- un顎叢孤凡圆钩兕僶路尘颈锄顎卆路产濒别 adjective
- 耻苍顎卆路苍补迟顎僶路尘颈锄别诲顎 adjective
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of anatomize1
Example Sentences
LuPone has two big numbers, both of which anatomize the ambivalence of married life: 鈥淭he Little Things You Do Together鈥 in the first act and 鈥淭he Ladies Who Lunch鈥 in the second.
Over the last quarter-century, the book as physical organism has been increasingly anatomized, and there has been no better medium for displaying anatomists鈥 findings than the book itself.
Though sartorial elegance is an instinct, as Mr. Cerruti suggested, it can be anatomized.
The ambivalence of marriage is preserved in all its volatile disorder, but the social conditions, which Bergman patiently anatomizes in his version, are left vague.
She has always had plenty to say about that, but now she is more interested in anatomizing all the forces that carved her into the woman she is today.
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