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.
The same subexpression may be spliced into more than one context to form several expressions.
Retrovirus-like elements transcribe, their transcript is spliced by the host and two to three proteins required for transposition are translated from it.
As with the experimental sentences, the target-bearing word from the recording without contrastive accent was spliced into the prosodic context of the other recording.
As spliced together in these regulations, the two models undercut one another.
The 1.8-kb transcript may be an alternative spliced form of the transcribed gene.
Note that the result of a choice is not grouped into a subformula, but spliced into the argument list without grouping.
Structure and sequence variation of the trypanosome spliced leader transcript.
Each stimulus was spliced out of the recording.