v
(computer science, transitive or intransitive) To syntactically replace a function call by the result of calling that function.
adj
Separated into component parts; decomposed; disassembled; deconstructed.
v
(transitive, see usage notes) To worsen a situation.
v
To remove attenuation (from)
n
(computing) A deauthentication frame in IEEE 802.11 Wi-Fi.
v
(transitive) To remove bias (from)
v
(programming, by extension) To discard events or signals that should not be processed because they occurred too close together.
v
(transitive) To perform some action to remove the calibration of an instrument.
v
To restore, recreate or reconstruct the objectionable content of a work.
v
(figuratively) To reduce or diminish.
v
(transitive) To decommodify.
v
(transitive, slang, hacking) to decompile (especially videogames)
v
(transitive) To rid of complexity; to simplify.
v
(transitive) To remove complications from.
v
To reduce to constituent parts; to decompose.
v
(transitive, computing) To restore (compressed data) to its original form.
v
To reverse a concatenation
v
To resolve a former conflation; to recognize or value a distinction that formerly was unrecognized or undervalued.
v
To alter (something) to avoid conflicting with something else
v
(transitive) To free from confusion; to enlighten or clarify.
v
To split something into a number of component parts.
v
(transitive) To critique.
n
The destroying or taking apart of an object; disassembly.
v
(ecology, transitive) To remove the animals from.
v
(transitive) To process (filtered data) so as to reconstruct the original data.
n
(computing) Something that deformats; a remover of formatting.
v
To separate and identify individual components of a formulated chemical substance.
n
(printing) dele (“mark signifying deletion”)
n
A process of recycling that involves the dismantling and/or disassembly of an item to gain the maximum amount of recyclable materials.
v
(business) To separate companies that were formerly combined; to reverse a merger.
v
(intransitive, of an emulsion) To separate into its components.
v
(transitive) To remove the mystery from something; to explain or clarify.
n
The act of depositing material, especially by a natural process; the resultant deposit.
adj
Involving or relating to the process of depositing.
v
(management, US) To reduce the scope of; to revise objectives downward, sometimes in the context of a funding shortfall.
v
(transitive) To the end segregation of (something).
v
(transitive, computing) To parse (serialized data) so as to reconstruct the original object.
v
(transitive) To make less simple.
v
(transitive) To clear from sophism or error.
v
(transitive, education) Synonym of detrack (“eliminate separate teaching based on pupils' ability level”)
n
The removal of structure.
n
The process by which something is destructured.
v
(transitive, education) To eliminate a system of tracking, where pupils are taught separately according to perceived ability level, from (a school).
v
(transitive, statistics, economics) To manipulate (data) to remove overall long-term trends in order to emphasise other patterns.
v
(transitive) To free from bitterness, remove bitterness
v
(neurobiology) To extinguish a conditioned association.
v
Misconstruction of deinterlace [(film, transitive) To convert (video footage) into a non-interlaced format; to remove one field from each video frame.]
n
The act of disinterring.
v
(transitive, intransitive) To break up and disappear; to dissipate.
v
(chemistry, transitive) To separate compounds into simpler component parts, usually by applying heat or through electrolysis.
v
(transitive) To break the continuity of; to disconnect; to loosen; to undo; to separate.
v
(US, politics) To change an area or property to a less restrictive zoning
n
Alternative spelling of makeover [A major change in the use of something, or in the appearance of something or someone; a radical transformation.]
v
(transitive) To fit with another fuse.
v
(transitive, intransitive) To cool again after being heated.
v
(obsolete) To reduce to a particular condition or state, especially one that is undesirable.
v
(transitive, logic) To convert a syllogism to a clearer or simpler form.
v
(transitive) To purge or cleanse again.
n
(medicine) The washing out of a cavity by the backward flow of an injected fluid.
v
(transitive, computing) To remove sensitive or personal data from (a database or file).
v
(transitive) To remove from a category; to decategorize.
v
(transitive) To remove complications from.
n
The act of uncreating; annihilation.
v
(transitive) To deprive of sinews or strength.
v
(transitive, rare) To remove the strangeness from; to make less strange; make familiar.
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