decomposing / ˌdi kəmˈpoʊz /

分解分解的分解型分解性

decomposing2 个定义

v. 有主动词 verb

de·com·posed, de·com·pos·ing.

  1. to separate or resolve into constituent parts or elements; disintegrate:The bacteria decomposed the milk into its solid and liquid elements.
v. 无主动词 verb

de·com·posed, de·com·pos·ing.

  1. to rot; putrefy: The egg began to decompose after a day in the sun.

decomposing 近义词

v. 动词 verb

rot, break up

v. 动词 verb

analyze by taking apart

更多decomposing例句

  1. Within the peat — packed remains of partially decomposed plants — oxygen-bearing organic compounds called cellulose contain clues to the climate history of the region.
  2. Don’t let it decompose in nature or “fertilize” someone’s yard.
  3. Studies of how bodies decompose underwater suggest that if the thalattosaur was a carcass when the ichthyosaur found it, the prey’s limbs would have rotted off before its tail, the authors argue.
  4. Tropical peatlands are permanently flooded forests where fallen leaves and branches accumulate for centuries rather than decomposing.
  5. Left to decompose, trash and recycling break down into methane or carbon dioxide.
  6. He wants to take the fingers, let them decompose, then take the bones and make a finger bone necklace out of it.
  7. The question before us, then, is this: how quickly does a dead person decompose?
  8. Instead, as the body began to decompose, she spread baking soda on the floorboards to mask the smell.
  9. By this time the husks will have begun to decompose and darken the kernels.
  10. Mineral acids decompose it, with the evolution of sulphuretted hydrogen.
  11. A strong heat will decompose this lunar nitre, and recover the silver.
  12. Remember that the hanging of meat is for the purpose of allowing it to begin to decompose.
  13. Betton's eyes, fixed on him, saw his face decompose like a substance touched by some powerful acid.