0 past simple and past participle of splice
1 to join two pieces of rope, film, etc. together at their ends in order to form one long piece:
Scientists have discovered how to splice pieces of DNA.
A completely new possibility of organising sounds appears with tape editing, which permits tape to be spliced and arranged with an extraordinary new precision.
The relative locations of the alternatively spliced regions are shown.
All of the recorded target words were then spliced onto a single rendition of the carrier phrase spoken by the same speaker.
Expression levels of splicing factors appear to have a strong influence on the natural variation in abundance of corresponding alternatively spliced transcripts.
Cities is a strange, textual beast whose genetic strands are spliced and mutated increasingly as the narrative proceeds.
Genotypes that express lesser amounts of splicing factors possess more incorrectly spliced transcripts.
Investigators have long wondered how these alternatively spliced proteins were produced.
Each stimulus was spliced out of the recording.