0 present participle of fragment
1 to break something into small parts or to be broken up in this way:
But for the second half, the dot that began the film bounces around the 'solo' structures, fragmenting them into single dots, as though these were all the music's 'notes'.
Through close attention to the person and the hands-on nature of its care, it aspires to heal the fragmenting experience of the hospital and of health care.
Completion of colouring of fragmenting set.
American schools are fragmenting if not decaying.
Prior to the 1990s the choice was limited to vast unwieldy volumes or a couple of textbooks which eschewed the common themes by fragmenting their narratives along nation-based lines.
This unavoidably perturbs the symmetry of the colouring, in particular of the set of unused colour pairs, but the asymmetry is limited because the fragmenting set is small.
These mitochondria can be seen extending, contracting, fragmenting and even fusing with one another as they move in three dimensions throughout the cytoplasm.
Therefore, the wiping operation must be conducted manually, which also brings along the danger of the solar cells fragmenting.