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exteriorize
[ ik-steer-ee-uh-rahyz ]
verb (used with object)
- to make exterior; externalize.
- Surgery. to expose (an internal structure) temporarily outside the body, for observation, surgery, or experimentation.
exteriorize
/ ɪ°ìˈ²õ³Ùɪə°ùɪəˌ°ù²¹Éª³ú /
verb
- surgery to expose (an attached organ or part) outside a body cavity, esp in order to remove it from an operating area
- another word for externalize
Derived Forms
- ±ð³æËŒ³Ù±ð°ù¾±´Ç°ù¾±Ëˆ³ú²¹³Ù¾±´Ç²Ô, noun
Other ˜yÐÄvlog Forms
- ±ð³æ·³Ù±ðr¾±Â·´Ç°ù·¾±Â·³ú²¹î€ƒt¾±´Ç²Ô noun
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of exteriorize1
Example Sentences
Sanders has spent his life transposing heavy human thought into gusting human breath, but hearing him exteriorize a few casual brain waves this intimately might be what finally blows you clean out of your life.
Miranda’s ravaged inner life is exteriorized as in the medieval genre of psychomachia in which virtue and vice wage a battle for the soul.
Somehow the internet has become this exteriorized imagination.
Keltner’s approach to touch turns on the deeper idea that consciousness itself is “exteriorizedâ€â€”that we are alive in relation to others, not in relation to some imagined inner self, the homunculus in our heads.
The book, as a result, has a vague, detached, strangely exteriorized quality.
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