extract
31extract — v. & n. v.tr. 1 remove or take out, esp. by effort or force (anything firmly rooted). 2 obtain (money, an admission, etc.) with difficulty or against a person s will. 3 obtain (a natural resource) from the earth. 4 select or reproduce for… …
32extract — I. transitive verb Etymology: Middle English, from Latin extractus, past participle of extrahere, from ex + trahere to draw Date: 15th century 1. a. to draw forth (as by research) < extract data > b. to pull or take out forcibly < extracted …
33extract — See excerpt. See excerpt, extract …
34extract — See: extract oil …
35extract — [ɪkˈstrækt] verb [T] I 1) to remove something from something else Syn: obtain a method of extracting sulphur from copper ore[/ex] 2) to get information from someone using force II noun extract [ˈekstrækt] 1) [C] a short piece of writing that is… …
36extract — verb (t) /əkˈstrækt / (say uhk strakt), /ɛk / (say ek ) 1. to draw forth or get out by force: to extract a tooth. 2. to deduce (a doctrine, principle, etc.). 3. to derive or obtain (pleasure, comfort, etc.) from a particular source. 4. to take or …
37extract — Pō alo, ōla o; puhi (as water from steam); ūpī (by squeezing); unuhi; ōhu i (rare). ♦ Difficult to extract, i ī …
38extract — ekstraktas statusas T sritis chemija apibrėžtis Augalinių ar sintetinių tanidų tirpalas odoms rauginti. atitikmenys: angl. extract rus. экстракт …
39extract — ekstraktas statusas T sritis chemija apibrėžtis Tirpalas, gautas ekstrakcijos būdu. atitikmenys: angl. extract rus. экстракт ryšiai: sinonimas – ištrauka …
40extract — / ekstrækt/ noun a printed document which is part of a larger document ● He sent me an extract of the accounts …