[
US
/ˌɪnˈsaɪzd/
]
[ UK /ɪnsˈaɪzd/ ]
[ UK /ɪnsˈaɪzd/ ]
ADJECTIVE
- cut into with a sharp instrument
-
cut or impressed into a surface
an incised design
engraved invitations - sharply and deeply indented
How To Use incised In A Sentence
- South Asia, to 72 B.C.E. An early urban civilization in the Indus Valley produced the polished stone, metals, incised seals, and pictographs excavated since 1920 at Harappa and Mohenjo-Daro. C. Early Civilizations and Classical Empires of South and East Asia
- Three other ports were incised higher in the stomach wall on the patient's right-hand side, just beneath the liver. ABSOLUTE ZERO
- It is attributed to Joseph Henry Remmey, who is known for similar elaborately incised cobalt blue decoration, especially of stylized birds.
- This is where a drawing is incised into cardboard using a sharp point.
- I shaped a bird of sorts on the handle and incised Somare's totem on the blade.
- For, although they refer to lacerations of the hand, it is clear from the photographs used to illustrate the paper, both on the front and inside the journal, that these are incised wounds.
- The mediastinal pleura is then incised over the length of the esophagus, avoiding injury to any neural or major vascular structures.
- In engraving, fine lines are incised directly into the plate and the burrs removed to produce clean, sharp lines on the print.
- In the same excavations on Temple Hill, Robinson found a second example of a similar Archaic sacrificial calendar incised, boustrophedon, in the epichoric Corinthian alphabet, this time on a fragmentary lead tablet.
- Bone plugs from the patella and the tibial tubercle were taken in line with the incised tendon by using a small saw.