tearing away
71avulsion — n. tearing away; tissue which has been torn (Medicine) …
72decollage — The tearing away of parts of posters or other images which were adhered to each other in layers, so that portions of the underlayers contribute to the final image. (pr. de coh lahzh ) Decollage should not be confused with collage which is its… …
73avulsion — [ə vʌlʃ(ə)n] noun 1》 chiefly Medicine the action of pulling or tearing away. 2》 Law the sudden separation of land from one property and its attachment to another, especially by flooding. Compare with alluvion. Derivatives avulse verb Origin C17:… …
74rapid — (L). Tearing away; swift …
75avulsion — a•vul•sion [[t]əˈvʌl ʃən[/t]] n. 1) a tearing away 2) law the sudden removal of soil by change in a river s course or by a flood, from the land of one owner to that of another 3) a part torn off • Etymology: 1615–25; < L …
76rapid — rap•id [[t]ˈræp ɪd[/t]] adj. er, est, n. 1) occurring within a short time: rapid growth[/ex] 2) acting with speed; swift: a rapid worker[/ex] 3) characterized by speed: rapid motion[/ex] 4) geo Usu., rapids. a part of a river where the current… …
77avulsion — /əˈvʌlʃən/ (say uh vulshuhn) noun 1. a tearing away. 2. Law the sudden removal of soil by change in a river s course or by a flood, from the land of one owner to that of another. 3. a part torn off. {Latin āvulsio} …
78evulsion — /iˈvʌlʃən/ (say ee vulshuhn) noun 1. the act of plucking or pulling out; forcible extraction. 2. the forcible tearing away of a part. {Latin ēvulsio, from ēvellere pluck out} …
79ἀποσπασμοῖς — ἀποσπασμός tearing away masc dat pl …
80ἀποσπασμοῦ — ἀποσπασμός tearing away masc gen sg …