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单词 disembody
释义

Definition of disembody in English:

disembody

verbdisembodied, disembodies, disembodying dɪsɪmˈbɒdidɪsɛmˈbɒdiˌdɪsəmˈbɑdi
[with object]
  • Separate (something) from its material form.

    the play of light off the dome's glass further served to disembody it
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The concept of social costs, as typically invoked, completely disembodies and impersonalizes costs.
    • It seems more sensible to disembody it and focus attention on meanings and the codes producing them.
    • The austerity that has made desire philosophically acceptable is conspicuously absent from pleasure; pleasure is harder to disembody.
    • Or perhaps the hip-hop ‘nation’ has managed to de-essentialize and disembody blackness, while simultaneously solidifying its immanence.
    • In the woman's film, the gaze must be de-eroticized (since the spectator is now assumed to be female), but in doing this the films effectively disembody their spectator.
    • In partial contrast, early knowledge programs attempted to disembody all knowledge from its possessors to make it an organizational asset.
    • A further development in the process of disembodying the medical encounter is that clinical examination need no longer be negotiated through a body-to-body interface.
    • He believed that what he called our ‘modern technocracy ‘- the heir of Enlightenment rationalism which condemns humankind's religious dimension to the catacombs - ‘more than any other age tends to disembody man’.
    • Is there a danger that that can disembody the worship experience by simply turning people into passive watchers of the screen.
    • Finally, a singular attention to phonics disembodies its potential from the soul of reading-obtaining meaning from print.
    • Can it create community and commitment or does it eviscerate, virtualize, minimize, and disembody them?
    • The post-Cartesian theoretical move in this regard is to avoid mentalist discourses that reify or disembody such shared resources and thereby bifurcate the dynamically embodied person.
    • You seem to disembody them of their original meaning.
    • And language has the power to disembody that which was previously claimed as true, but has now become inconvenient.
    • It seems to me to be at least open as a possible point of view, that the moment you disembody business - deal with this concept of business being transmitted - that consequences follow, including the one I have identified.

Derivatives

  • disembodiment

  • noun ˌdɪsɪmˈbɒdɪm(ə)ntˌdɪsəmˈbɑdimənt
    • The project furthermore makes doubtful the possibility of posthumanism that is conditioned by cyborgization and human disembodiment because these two are virtually the outcomes of the metaphoric relationship.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Much as he deplores the disembodiment he finds at the heart of dying-to-know narratives, some kind of self-denial, he decides, is essential for the good, if not the true.
      • A further feature of this negative self is its particular disembodiment, isolation and fragility.
      • Thus, what alarms him is the dehumanization, disembodiment and moral anaesthetization that is now, he believes, accompanying the substitution of virtuality for reality.
      • Therefore, we must resist any and all architectures of disembodiment which remove labor from manufacturing in the global economy, war from geography, privacy from security, gender from race and dissent from justice.
 
 

Definition of disembody in US English:

disembody

verbˌdisəmˈbädēˌdɪsəmˈbɑdi
[with object]
  • Separate or free (something) from its concrete form.

    the play of light off the dome's glass further served to disembody it
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Or perhaps the hip-hop ‘nation’ has managed to de-essentialize and disembody blackness, while simultaneously solidifying its immanence.
    • In partial contrast, early knowledge programs attempted to disembody all knowledge from its possessors to make it an organizational asset.
    • Finally, a singular attention to phonics disembodies its potential from the soul of reading-obtaining meaning from print.
    • Is there a danger that that can disembody the worship experience by simply turning people into passive watchers of the screen.
    • You seem to disembody them of their original meaning.
    • The concept of social costs, as typically invoked, completely disembodies and impersonalizes costs.
    • He believed that what he called our ‘modern technocracy ‘- the heir of Enlightenment rationalism which condemns humankind's religious dimension to the catacombs - ‘more than any other age tends to disembody man’.
    • In the woman's film, the gaze must be de-eroticized (since the spectator is now assumed to be female), but in doing this the films effectively disembody their spectator.
    • It seems more sensible to disembody it and focus attention on meanings and the codes producing them.
    • The post-Cartesian theoretical move in this regard is to avoid mentalist discourses that reify or disembody such shared resources and thereby bifurcate the dynamically embodied person.
    • And language has the power to disembody that which was previously claimed as true, but has now become inconvenient.
    • The austerity that has made desire philosophically acceptable is conspicuously absent from pleasure; pleasure is harder to disembody.
    • Can it create community and commitment or does it eviscerate, virtualize, minimize, and disembody them?
    • It seems to me to be at least open as a possible point of view, that the moment you disembody business - deal with this concept of business being transmitted - that consequences follow, including the one I have identified.
    • A further development in the process of disembodying the medical encounter is that clinical examination need no longer be negotiated through a body-to-body interface.
 
 
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更新时间:2025/1/11 9:18:51