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Abstracted   /ˈæbstrˌæktɪd/   Listen
adjective
Abstracted  adj.  
1.
Separated or disconnected; withdrawn; removed; apart. "The evil abstracted stood from his own evil."
2.
Separated from matter; abstract; ideal. (Obs.)
3.
Abstract; abstruse; difficult. (Obs.)
4.
Inattentive to surrounding objects; absent in mind. "An abstracted scholar."



verb
Abstract  v. t.  (past & past part. abstracted; pres. part. abstracting)  
1.
To withdraw; to separate; to take away. "He was incapable of forming any opinion or resolution abstracted from his own prejudices."
2.
To draw off in respect to interest or attention; as, his was wholly abstracted by other objects. "The young stranger had been abstracted and silent."
3.
To separate, as ideas, by the operation of the mind; to consider by itself; to contemplate separately, as a quality or attribute.
4.
To epitomize; to abridge.
5.
To take secretly or dishonestly; to purloin; as, to abstract goods from a parcel, or money from a till. "Von Rosen had quietly abstracted the bearing-reins from the harness."
6.
(Chem.) To separate, as the more volatile or soluble parts of a substance, by distillation or other chemical processes. In this sense extract is now more generally used.



Abstract  v. t.  To perform the process of abstraction. (R.) "I own myself able to abstract in one sense."






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Abstracted" Quotes from Famous Books



... Huntley to begin the English Language lesson, for though every one was of course very abstracted, it gave some ostensible occupation. Before the hour was over Miss Bishop sailed into the room. She looked pale and anxious, but spoke with ...
— The Luckiest Girl in the School • Angela Brazil

... speaker; a butterfly, or the figure in a carpet may engage your attention in preference to him; or if these objects be absent, the simply averting your eye, looking through the window in quest of outward objects, will show that your mind has not been abstracted, and will display to him at least your wish of not attending. He may, however, possibly have lost the habit of watching your eye for approbation; then you may assault his ear: if all other resources ...
— Tales and Novels, Vol. IV • Maria Edgeworth

... Babel of discord might have awakened the slumbers of the very dead, and, therefore, was not long ere it dispelled the abstracted reveries of Edith Bellenden. She sent out Jenny to bring her the cause of the tumult which shook the castle to its very basis; but Jenny, once engaged in the bustling tide, found so much to ask and to hear, that she forgot the state of anxious uncertainty ...
— Old Mortality, Complete, Illustrated • Sir Walter Scott

... noticed that Alfred Blumenthal appeared abstracted, as if continually occupied with grave thoughts. One day, as he stood leaning against the window, gazing on the stars and stripes that floated across the street, he turned suddenly and exclaimed: "It is wrong to ...
— A Romance of the Republic • Lydia Maria Francis Child

... published works for certain libraries; but this is a trifling evil compared with the restrictions imposed upon the duration of copyright, which, in respect to works profound in philosophy, or elevated, abstracted, and refined in imagination, is tantamount almost to an exclusion of the author from all pecuniary recompence; and, even where works of imagination and manners are so constituted as to be adapted to immediate demand, as is the case of those of Burns, justly may it be asked, what reason can be assigned ...
— The Prose Works of William Wordsworth • William Wordsworth


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