0 past simple and past participle of dissect
1 to cut open something, especially a dead body or a plant, and study its structure:
When each group in the examples given is dissected, a myriad of opinions will probably emerge.
At 60 days post-infection we dissected the fish and defined prevalence, intensity of infection and weight of outcrossed and selfed parasites.
Each amphipod was then dissected and the occurrence of parasites in its haemocoel was recorded.
The difference have to be dissected and studied one by one.
We dissected it into its component parts, 'un-correct-able'.
Five-foot-long sharks appeared when the reindeer carcasses were set overboard for a cleaning, and the sharks themselves were caught and dissected for their livers.
Flies were dissected 27-46 days later and the midgut, proboscis and salivary glands of each fly were examined for the presence of trypanosomes.
We dissected 50 shoaling males caught before the breeding season and 48 males caught during the breeding season.