[ US /dɪˈsoʊsieɪt/ ]
[ UK /dɪsˈə‍ʊsɪˌe‍ɪt/ ]
VERB
  1. part; cease or break association with
    She disassociated herself from the organization when she found out the identity of the president
  2. to undergo a reversible or temporary breakdown of a molecule into simpler molecules or atoms
    acids dissociate to give hydrogen ions
  3. regard as unconnected
    you must dissociate these two events!
    decouple our foreign policy from ideology
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How To Use dissociate In A Sentence

  • The organism cannot be dissociated from its environment.
  • I wish to dissociate myself from Mr Irvine's remarks.
  • I am delighted to see that he has also dissociated us from the objectionable features of article 104B regarding fiscal deficits.
  • Too much of ourselves must be deleted when we erase our personal histories and abruptly dissociate ourselves from who we have been’.
  • The primary species of bound UCB in our models were: undissociated diacid for phosphatidylcholine, dianion for dodecyl maltoside micelles and cyclodextrins, and both monoanions and dianion for sodium taurocholate. BioMed Central - Latest articles
  • Where policy is radically dissociated from the reality of death, the paradoxical result is a society dominated by the logic of death.
  • Production of the weak acid nitrite and excretion of undissociated nitric acid may help to stabilize cytosolic pH.
  • The macerated cells were dissociated in a clean slide with a fresh fixative solution.
  • In Freudian terms, one may be as dissociated from the demands of the super-ego as from those of the id.
  • I am delighted to see that he has also dissociated us from the objectionable features of article 104B regarding fiscal deficits.
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