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detach
[ dih-tach ]
verb (used with object)
- to unfasten and separate; disengage; disunite.
- Military. to send away (a regiment, ship, etc.) on a special mission.
detach
/ 诲瑟藞迟忙迟蕛 /
verb
- to disengage and separate or remove, as by pulling; unfasten; disconnect
- military to separate (a small unit) from a larger, esp for a special assignment
Derived Forms
- 诲别藞迟补肠丑补产濒别, adjective
- 诲别藞迟补肠丑别谤, noun
- 诲别藢迟补肠丑补藞产颈濒颈迟测, noun
Other 亚洲网紅露点 Forms
- 诲别路迟补肠丑顎僡路产濒别 adjective
- 诲别路迟补肠丑顎卆路产颈濒顎僫路迟测 noun
- 诲别路迟补肠丑顎僡路产濒测 adverb
- 诲别路迟补肠丑顎侥谤 noun
- non顎吇灞鹇烦俨钩Τ箢卆路产颈濒顎僫路迟测 noun
- non顎吇灞鹇烦俨钩Τ箢僡路产濒别 adjective
- 辫谤别顎卍别路迟补肠丑顎 verb (used with object)
- 蝉别濒蹿顎-诲别路迟补肠丑顎僫苍驳 adjective
- un顎吇灞鹇烦俨钩Τ箢僡路产濒别 adjective
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of detach1
Example Sentences
It is why detached observers are led to the conclusion City's football is regimented.
This allows her heart to deflate, allowing the "very tricky" procedure to detach part of her heart - the right ventricular outflow tract - and the pulmonary artery from where it has stuck to her skin.
But now, with Trump turning American economic power against friend and foe alike, we risk sliding into something closer to autarky, a world where the U.S. stands alone, detached from any coherent bloc.
To him, the apartment felt detached and a difficult place in which to welcome guests.
Ellen's account burns with the electricity of the moment: Matthew still detached, being scientific and 鈥渢aking the group pulse.鈥
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