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  1. EXTRACTED definition: 1. past simple and past participle of extract 2. to remove or take out something: 3. to make…. Learn more.

  2. be extracted from The oil which is extracted from olives is used for cooking. The tooth was eventually extracted. Thesaurus: synonyms, antonyms, and examples

  3. a solution or preparation containing the active principles of a drug, plant juice, or the like; concentrated solution: vanilla extract. Synonyms: distillation, decoction. a solid, viscid, or liquid substance extracted from a plant, drug, or the like, containing its essence in concentrated form: beef extract. extract.

  4. be extracted from The oil which is extracted from olives is used for cooking. The tooth was eventually extracted. Thesaurus: synonyms, antonyms, and examples

  5. Extract forms a kind of mirror image of abstract: more common as a verb, but also used as a noun and adjective. The adjective, meaning “derived or descended,” is now obsolete, as is a sense of the noun that overlapped with abstract, “summary.”.

  6. a solid, viscid, or liquid substance extracted from a plant, drug, or the like, containing its essence in concentrated form

  7. extract something (from something) to choose information, etc. from a book, a computer, etc. to be used for a particular purpose. This article is extracted from his new book. extract something (from somebody/something) (formal or specialist) to take or pull something out, especially when this needs force or effort.

  8. From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English extract ex‧tract 1 / ɪkˈstrækt / AWL verb [transitive] 1 REMOVE formal to remove an object from somewhere, especially with difficulty SYN pull out You’ll have to have that tooth extracted. extract something from something He extracted an envelope from his inside pocket. 2 REMOVE to ...

  9. to derive or obtain (pleasure, comfort, etc.) from a particular source: He extracted satisfaction from the success of his sons. to take or copy out (matter), as from a book. to make excerpts from (a book, pamphlet, etc.). to extort (information, money, etc.): to extract a secret from someone.

  10. When you extract something, you remove it from a larger whole. You can extract a passage from a book, or a liquid essence from a vanilla bean—vanilla extract. Ex- means out of, and when you extract, you draw something out of something else.

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