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To disintegration
noun
A process by which anything disintegrates.
Exact(60)
But all these materials tend to corrode and disintegrate with time; even aluminum is vulnerable to disintegration caused by the weather and UV rays.
Foreign-policy commentators said that it would lead Iraq to disintegration, or, worse, ethnic cleansing.
By the 1950s Buffalo's economy had already embarked on its long path to disintegration.
Tells how Milosevic more than anyone else is regarded as the man who started Yugoslavia on the road to disintegration.
Imagine a serious outbreak of paramilitary violence, typically the first step to disintegration in a Balkan country.
It gave rise to the Republican Party while speeding the Whig Party on its way to disintegration.
Sports stars are just the latest category of artists whose psychological inflexibility seems to drive them first to success and secondly to disintegration.
New expressions of lay piety and heresy challenged the authority of the church and its teachings, leaving the papacy itself vulnerable to disintegration.
The outer and most durable layer, the exine, is very resistant to disintegration; treatment with intense heat, strong acids, or strong bases has little effect upon it.
It also led him into a controversy with Marx that contributed to disintegration of the International Working Men's Association in the 1870s.
Even if they weren't played, they were still prone to disintegration; mold can grow on the wax, making the cylinders unusable.
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