0 to remove something or someone, especially by force, from a fixed position: --
1 to force someone or something from a place or position: --
In addition, 2 out of 5 worms that had been dislodged from lung tissue and serially sectioned exhibited more severe tegumental defects.
First, it is not clear how beneficiary concentrated group coalitions are dislodged by outsider concentrated group coalitions.
Far from seeking to dislodge the entire fabric of colonialism, the protesters hoped to redress immediate grievances.
Was the patronage element of popular mobilization "extremely difficult to dislodge"?
How "difficult to dislodge" is a judgment call.
Primarily deployed outside elite circles, these reinterpretations further dislodged the purposive logic of phrenology as a world-comparative theory of difference.
Even then, it never dislodged the colonial label 'dancing girl'.
The growth medium containing the dislodged microglia cells was centrifuged at 800 rpm for 5 minutes.