释义 |
▪ I. † reˈsect, pa. pple. Obs. rare. [ad. L. resect-us, pa. pple. of resecāre: see next.] Cut off or away; removed by cutting.
1545T. Raynalde Byrth Mankynde 99 These partes beynge once resecte and cutte from the bodye, then turne the reste. 1642H. More Song of Soul ii. i. ii. xlvi, I ought reject No soul from wished immortalitie, But give them durance when they are resect From organized corporeitie. ▪ II. resect, v.|rɪˈsɛkt| [f. L. resect-, ppl. stem of resecāre to cut off, f. re- re- + secāre to cut.] †1. trans. To cut off or away; to remove. Obs.
1653R. Baillie Dissuas. Vind. (1655) 87 You will take yourself here to the whole Assembly at Westminster, resecting both their Directory and Confession. 1686A. Horneck Crucif. Jesus xvii. 421 He means no more than that the sins should be resected which cleave to it. 2. Surg. To cut or pare down; to remove a portion of (bone, cartilage, nerve, etc.) in this way; to cut out (in part).
1846F. Brittan tr. Malgaigne's Man. Oper. Surg. 183 Others have proposed to..resect the bones of the fore-arm without disarticulating the humerus. 1879St. George's Hosp. Rep. IX. 656 The whole of the bones which form the ankle-joint had been resected. 1894Lancet 3 Nov. 1033 A portion of the sixth rib was resected. 1924R. Howard Surg. Emergencies iv. 71 The portion of the gut to be resected is brought well out of the wound. 1976Nature 25 Mar. 351/1 Two weeks after the initial operation the correct nerve to the anconeus muscle was crushed, or cut and resected. absol.1897Trans. Amer. Pediatric Soc. IX. 91 In a tuberculous case you may resect repeatedly and yet the child will not get well. 3. Surveying. To map by resection.
1888W. H. Richards Textbk. Mil. Topogr. (ed. 2) iv. 38 Having determined stations by intersection, as described, the surveyor may, by reference to them, resect or find the point on his survey which corresponds to his position on the ground. 1931M. Hotine Surveying from Air Photographs vi. 92 The problem is..to resect the position of the perspective centre in space. Hence reˈsected ppl. a.
1897Syd. Soc. Lex. s.v. Resection, The partially resected bone is replaced at the termination of the operation. 1913A. R. Hinks Maps & Survey v. 108 Round about the intersected and resected points, the detail is sketched in by eye estimation. |