- To dissociate is to break apart from someone, such as an employee leaving a business or a spouse leaving a marriage.
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- vt. 游离;使分离;分裂
- vi. 游离;分离;分裂
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1. It is impossible to dissociate language from culture.
把语言与文化分离是不可能的。
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2. I usually get the best results when I dissociate in both scenes.
通常,当我用两种场景来解除关联时,能获得最佳结果。
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3. His plants would produce electricity during peak daytime hours and be used to dissociate water to make hydrogen by night.
他的工厂将在繁忙的白天时间生产电,夜间就会利用氢气来分离水。
- dissociate (v.) 1610s (implied in dissociated), from Latin dissociatus, past participle of dissociare "to separate from companionship, disunite, set at variance," from dis- "apart" (see dis-) + sociare "to join," from socius "companion, ally," from PIE *sokw-yo-, suffixed form of root *sekw- (1) "to follow." Attested from 1540s as a past-participle adjective meaning "separated."
dis·so·ci·ate / dɪˈsəʊʃieɪt ; NAmE dɪˈsoʊʃieɪt / / dɪˈsəʊsieɪt ; NAmE dɪˈsoʊsieɪt / verb 1 ( also dis·as·so·ci·ate ) dissociateyourself/sb from sb/sth to say or do sth to show that you are not connected with or do not support sb/sth; to make it clear that sth is not connected with a particular plan, action, etc. 否认同…有关系;声明不支持;表明无关 ◆ He tried to dissociate himself from the party's more extreme views. 他极力表明自己并不赞成该党较为偏激的观点。 ◆ They were determined to dissociate the UN from any agreement to impose sanctions. 他们决心阻止联合国同意实施制裁。 2 dissociatesb/sth (from sth) ( formal) to think of two people or things as separate and not connected with each other 把…分开(或看作是无关联的) ◆ She tried to dissociate the two events in her mind. 她试图从思想上将这两件事分开。 OPP associate ▶ dis·so·ci·ation dissociation dissociations / dɪˌsəʊʃiˈeɪʃn ; NAmE dɪˌsoʊʃiˈeɪʃn / / dɪˌsəʊsiˈeɪʃn ; NAmE dɪˌsoʊsiˈeɪʃn / noun [uncountable ] dissociate dissociates dissociated dissociating dis·so·ci·ate / dɪˈsəʊʃieɪt ; NAmE dɪˈsoʊʃieɪt / dis·so·ci·ation / dɪˌsəʊʃiˈeɪʃn ; NAmE dɪˌsoʊʃiˈeɪʃn /
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