0 present participle of dismantle --
1 to take a machine apart or to come apart into separate pieces: --
You need to sharpen your abilities to dismantle his excuses.
If you disagree, then dismantle the argument with some sort of well-argued counter-proposition.
Unions accuse the government of dismantling the National Health Service.
Over the next three years, we will be gradually dismantling the company and selling off the profitable units.
The good thing about the bike is that it dismantles if you want to put it in the back of the car.
She dismantled the washing machine to see what the problem was, but couldn't put it back together again.
Civil disobedience, however, is not a theory for dismantling the modern democratic state.
It should rather be understood as the unfolding and blossoming of a potential of disintegration, dismantling, and deconstruction within drama itself.
Dismantling a programme is much easier than building one.
A dismantling of formal institutional checks and balances is therefore not reasonable.
Her dismantling of operant conditioning is well done, but unnecessary.
Dismantling antiquated notions of prestige accents naturally follows.
The dismantling of the administrative price mechanism in hydrocarbons by 2002 will remove part of the price distortion.
Therefore, consolidation was not really paid for by dismantling the welfare state in the 1980s.