divulsion
11divulsion — noun The act of separating by force, especially by dilation or pulling apart …
12divulsion — 1. Removal of a part by tearing. 2. Forcible dilation of the walls of a cavity or canal. * * * di·vul·sion dī vəl shən n a tearing apart di·vulse vəls vt, di·vulsed; di·vuls·ing * * * di·vul·sion (dĭ …
13Divulsion — Di|vul|si|on, die; , en [lat. divulsio = Zerreißung, Trennung] (Med.): gewaltsame Trennung, Zerreißung …
14Divulsion — Di|vulsio̱n [aus lat. divulsio = Zerreißung, Trennung] w; , en: gewaltsame Trennung, Zerreißung …
15Divulsion — Di|vul|si|on [...v...] die; , en <aus lat. divulsio »Zerreißung, Trennung« zu divellere, vgl. ↑divellieren> gewaltsame Trennung, Zerreißung (Med.) …
16divulsion — n. violent separation, tearing apart, uprooting …
17divulsion — di·vul·sion …
18divulsion — /daɪˈvʌlʃən/ (say duy vulshuhn) noun a tearing asunder; violent separation. {French, from Latin dīvulsio} –divulsive, adjective …
19divulsiune — divulsiúne s. f. (sil. si u ), g. d. art. divulsiúnii Trimis de siveco, 10.08.2004. Sursa: Dicţionar ortografic DIVULSIÚNE s.f. (Liv.) Smulgere, extragere, scoatere violentă. [pron. si u , var. divulsie s.f. / < fr. divulsion …
20Attract — At*tract , v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Attracted}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Attracting}.] [L. attractus, p. p. of attrahere; ad + trahere to draw. See {Trace}, v. t.] 1. To draw to, or cause to tend to; esp. to cause to approach, adhere, or combine; or to cause …