How To Use Anatomize In A Sentence

  • MySpace doesn't just create social networks, it anatomizes them.
  • As John Crudele keeps pointing out in the New York Post, the job-count books at the Labor Department-which came out later in the week-are completely cooked, and Grant's Interest Rate Observer has anatomized the utter phoniness of the Commerce Department's "anhedonic" productivity figures. Why Does Paul O'Neill Keep His Alcoa Options?
  • I anatomized him in my cellar, slowly taking him apart as though, like the physicians of old, I might be able to find some as yet unsuspected fifth humor within him, some black and malignant thing responsible for his betrayal. On The Anatomization of an Unknown Man (1637) by Frans Mier
  • By the end, you realize the movie has slyly anatomized the class resentments of an entire community. Kidman's A Comedienne
  • Each word performs its solitary duty unassisted by the others, with the result that Boylan's tomatoes, rather than being shown, are only subtly anatomized.
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  • While seeking out and trying to anatomize the strange gardens abandoned in place by the Outers' greatest genius, Avernus, the gene wizard Sri Hong-Owen is embroiled in the plots and counterplots of the family that employs her. Books in the Mail (W/E 02/27/2010)
  • They were not like Da Vinci, who would anatomize corpses to learn about the conformation of the human body.
  • Easy to appeal to but hard to anatomize and harder to practice intelligently, there are honorable loyalties, but there are also stupid ones, and destructive ones, and it is particularly self-righteous and futile to stress it in a relationship that involves careers, talent and business. David Colbert: Styron's Choice: Authors, Editors, and Loyalty
  • For the society Sander set out to anatomize into permanent categories was changing rapidly -- indeed, was hurtling toward self-destruction. Just Regular Volks
  • But, the teaching material that I anatomize a class today is him!
  • I offer the following flim-flam to the examination of your readers, all of whom are, I presume, more or less, readers of Shakspeare, and far better qualified than I am to "anatomize" his writings, and "see what bred about his heart. Notes and Queries, Number 15, February 9, 1850
  • Raymond anatomizes a project called ‘fetchmail,’ that he ran as an experiment for the new theories concerning software engineering suggested by the development model of Linux.
  • Thomas Carlyle was perhaps the first to anatomize the note of division that in part defines the cultural crisis inherited by Howards End.
  • Emile Zola, in particular, anatomized our current era of irrational economic misery between 1871 and 1893, in his Rougon-Maquart series. Jane Smiley: Other Economists in the Room
  • There is no work anywhere to my knowledge that attempts with the precision and stamina of this one to anatomize a compositional process down to its very last move.
  • Native Son, which so closely follows the Dixonian logic while turning it inside out - logic that remains, sadly, a prominent and enduring strand in American culture - anatomizes this interlocking of whites and their ‘beasts.’
  • She anatomizes an enduring ‘culture of courtship’ but rejects Alan Macfarlane's highly individualistic interpretation of that culture.
  • A human being could - and should - be studied in its anatomized form.
  • But now, as George Orwell, he is in a position to anatomize the economic and class infrastructure of St. Cyprian's, and those hierarchies of power that the pupil would later meet in grown-up, public, political form: in this respect those schools were truly named "preparatory. Such, Such Was Eric Blair
  • anatomize the bodies of the victims of this strange disease
  • His masterpiece is Rossetti and his Circle, published in 1922, which wickedly and wittily anatomizes the foibles of the Pre-Raphaelites.
  • From 1898 until he died in 1927, he anatomized Old Paris right down to the doorknobs -- the book is the exact size of a Parisian cobblestone -- but as arranged, neighborhood by neighborhood, the photos comprise one of the great works of art of the last two centuries. All I Want For Christmas...
  • Thus, during mid-century, the business of American cultural historians was to anatomize the triumphant American Introduction: A History of Transatlantic Romanticism
  • In this extraordinary passage, Wright anatomizes the lynch mentality: collective hysteria as a matter of symbolic racial representation.
  • The novel reads like a compendium of every social evil breathlessly anatomized in every op-ed page over the past two decades. My Sister, My Love
  • We get as close as we are ever likely - or might wish - to seeing the dissection from the point of view of the anatomized cadaver, following the route the cadaver took and the rituals it underwent from gibbet to dissecting table.
  • My having found it so marks a lazy mind I think, because the poem isn't too difficult - though I then proceeded to enjoy myself pretending it was as I bluntly anatomized it.
  • With estimable discipline, Smith's inquiry anatomizes vocal volume and pitch, yet rhythm receives scant attention and, not surprisingly, scrutiny of poetic meter is wanting.
  • I also answered for shooting and publishing centre nerve anatomize teaching materials of electronic edition.
  • Remainder doesn't pretend to anatomize the human mind, translating its ineffable qualities into sensible prose, as so much middling psychological realism post-Joyce and post-Woolf generally settles for. Point of View in Fiction
  • This writer anatomized the depth of human behavior
  • I also answered for shooting and publishing centre nerve anatomize teaching materials of electronic edition.
  • Torn, we are told, was so obsessed by anatomical study that he stashed anatomized body parts under his bed, an unhealthy practice that contributed to his early death.
  • Wright anatomizes all Dixon's premises when Bigger crosses the color line and enters the Daltons' white house.
  • Specific statistical date and diagrams are used to anatomize the problems in the current management.
  • For example, in section 15, he anatomizes the titles of some books and finds them wanting because of the divergence between their titles and their contents, implicitly inviting the reader to perform the same operation on his book.
  • As such, monuments are uniquely qualified to figure prominently in the ‘aesthetic of destruction,’ the imagination of disaster famously anatomized by Susan Sontag.

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