0 past simple and past participle of excise
1 to remove something, especially by cutting:
The passage could have been excised, which seems unlikely; it could also antedate the sources that include it.
The malaligned atrial septum was widely excised to reveal a small left atrium receiving the pulmonary venous orifices and a tiny atrial appendage.
Right ventricular infundibular muscle bundles were resected and the dysplastic and rudimentary remnants of the pulmonary valve were excised.
In these experiments, excised tomato leaflets with petioles were used instead of leaf discs.
They were digitized and excised for auditory presentation in the same manner as the target bisyllables.
Thus, even the excised words from the high predictability sentences were more intelligible relative to those excised from the low predictability sentences.
Ovarian fragments containing fully grown immature oocytes were excised from females that had been anaesthetised by ice-chilling.
After the dura mater was excised, the pia mater was eliminated under the microscope control with a tungsten wire sharpened to 1-2 mm.