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  1. Dictionary
    disentangle
    /ˌdɪs(ɪ)nˈtaŋɡl/

    verb

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. DISENTANGLE definition: 1. to separate things that have become joined or confused: 2. to separate things that have become…. Learn more.

  3. When you disentangle something, you free it from a snarl or tangle. If you have long hair and pierced ears, you've probably had to disentangle an earring from a curl of hair.

  4. The meaning of DISENTANGLE is to free from entanglement : unravel. How to use disentangle in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Disentangle.

  5. to separate things that have become joined or confused: disentangle something from something It's difficult to disentangle hard fact from myth, or truth from lies. I tried to disentangle the wires under my desk. Synonym. extricate formal. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Separating and dividing. apheresis. atomize. bifurcate.

  6. If you disentangle something or someone from an undesirable thing or situation, you separate them from that thing or remove them from that situation. They are looking at ways to disentangle him from this major policy decision.

  7. Disentangle definition: to free or become free from entanglement; untangle; extricate (often followed by from).. See examples of DISENTANGLE used in a sentence.

  8. disentangle something (from something) to separate different arguments, ideas, etc. that have become confused. It's not easy to disentangle the truth from the official statistics. It is important to disentangle all the factors that may be causing your stress.

  9. 1. If you disentangle a complicated or confused situation, you make it easier to understand or manage to understand it, by clearly recognizing each separate element. [...] 2. If you disentangle something or someone from an undesirable thing or situation, you separate it from that thing or remove it from that situation. [...] 3.

  10. DISENTANGLE definition: 1. to separate someone or something that is connected to something else in a complicated way: 2…. Learn more.

  11. disentangle. From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English dis‧en‧tan‧gle /ˌdɪsənˈtæŋɡəl/ verb [ transitive] 1 to separate different ideas or pieces of information that have become confused together It’s very difficult to disentangle fact from fiction in what she’s saying. 2 → disentangle yourself (from somebody/something ...