disassociating

英 [ˌdɪsəˈsəʊʃieɪtɪŋ] 美 [ˌdɪsəˈsoʊʃieɪtɪŋ]

v.  (通常指为避免麻烦或指责)(同…)脱离瓜葛,(与…)分清界线,(和…)一刀两断; 把…(与…)分开
disassociate的现在分词



柯林斯词典

  1. VERB (通常指为避免麻烦或指责)(同…)脱离瓜葛,(与…)分清界线,(和…)一刀两断
    If you disassociate yourself from something or someone, you say or show that you are not connected with them, usually in order to avoid trouble or blame.
    1. I wish to disassociate myself from this very sad decision...
      我希望我同这个令人遗憾的决定撇清关系。
    2. He proposed that the Council should disassociate itself from such behaviour.
      他提议委员会应同这种行为撇清关系。
  2. VERB 把…(与…)分开
    If you disassociate one group or thing from another, you separate them.
    1. ...an attempt by the president to disassociate the military from politics.
      总统实行军政分离的一次尝试

双语例句

  1. Data and metadata are encoded within XML and transported as ASCII strings, disassociating the values from their physical representation by the host architecture.
    数据和元数据用XML进行编码并作为字符串传输,并通过主机架构把值和它们的物理表示分开。