Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- verb Present participle of
disorganize .
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
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Examples
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Or it may emerge in the body like a disease, corrupting its tissues and disorganizing its structures, so that it turns pestilent and repugnant, oozing or crumbling away before our eyes.
Weird birthday wishes to H.P. Lovecraft and a musical interlude 2009
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But there it was, love, disorganizing men's and women's lives, driving toward destruction and death, turning topsy-turvy everything that was sensible and considerate, making bawds or suicides out of virtuous women, and scoundrels and murderers out of men who had always been clean and square.
Chapter XII 2010
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Or it may emerge in the body like a disease, corrupting its tissues and disorganizing its structures, so that it turns pestilent and repugnant, oozing or crumbling away before our eyes.
Weird birthday wishes to H.P. Lovecraft and a musical interlude 2009
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Or it may emerge in the body like a disease, corrupting its tissues and disorganizing its structures, so that it turns pestilent and repugnant, oozing or crumbling away before our eyes.
A Different Stripe: 2009
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Or it may emerge in the body like a disease, corrupting its tissues and disorganizing its structures, so that it turns pestilent and repugnant, oozing or crumbling away before our eyes.
Authors and others 2010
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Or it may emerge in the body like a disease, corrupting its tissues and disorganizing its structures, so that it turns pestilent and repugnant, oozing or crumbling away before our eyes.
A Different Stripe: 2009
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Or it may emerge in the body like a disease, corrupting its tissues and disorganizing its structures, so that it turns pestilent and repugnant, oozing or crumbling away before our eyes.
Authors and others 2010
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It's not that I love the disorder, the disorganizing, the disruption of Autism.
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To the brain, reading and writing on a computer is an entirely different activity -- neurologically disorganizing -- than reading and writing using paper, which is a neurologically organizing activity.
Jane G. Goldberg, Ph.D.: Brain Health: Is the Virtual World Creating a Virtual Brain? Ph.D. Jane G. Goldberg 2010
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To the brain, reading and writing on a computer is an entirely different activity -- neurologically disorganizing -- than reading and writing using paper, which is a neurologically organizing activity.
Jane G. Goldberg, Ph.D.: Brain Health: Is the Virtual World Creating a Virtual Brain? Ph.D. Jane G. Goldberg 2010
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