Desarticular in english

Disarticulate

pronunciation: dɪsɑrtɪkjəleɪt part of speech: verb
In gestures

desarticular = dismember ; spoil ; dismantle ; break up ; foil ; thwart ; take + Nombre + apart. 

Example: Books can seldom be disbound for the benefit of bibliographers (although it is worth remembering that they sometimes have to be rebound, when they are completely dismembered), but we can now see through printing ink by means of betaradiography.Example: But if set-off did occur and threatened to set back and spoil subsequent impressions of the first forme, the tympan cloth could be rubbed over with lye to clean it.Example: The reader has to reserve books on display and wait till the entire display is dismantled.Example: Subarrangement at entry terms can break up long sequences of entries listed under the same keyword.Example: The author considers the incidence of arson in US libraries and some ways of foiling arsonists through constant vigilance and observation of library users.Example: A public library's design can go far in either reinforcing or thwarting the intimacy of reading and in determining its success -- functionally, aesthetically and financially.Example: The houses are built, then taken apart and trucked to where they are needed and then re-assembled.

Desarticular synonyms

disjoint in spanish: desarticular, pronunciation: dɪsdʒɔɪnt part of speech: adjective
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