| decoupled | past of decouple | en |
| decouple | eliminate airborne shockwaves from (an explosive) | en |
| decouple | reduce or eliminate the coupling of (one circuit or part to another) | en |
| decouple | reduce or eliminate the coupling of (one circuit or part to another) eliminate airborne shockwaves from (an explosive) regard as unconnected; "you must dissociate these two events!"; "decouple our foreign policy from ideology | en |
| decouple | {1, to unlink item | en |
| decouple | separate; disconnect one thing from another; uncouple the coupling of one circuit or part to another (Electronics); absorb the shock of an explosion; decrease airborne shockwaves from an explosion by detonating the explosion underground fiil | en |
| decouple | regard as unconnected; "you must dissociate these two events!"; "decouple our foreign policy from ideology" | en |
| decouple | If two countries, organizations, or ideas that were connected in some way are decoupled, the connection between them is ended. a conception which decouples culture and politics The issue threatened to decouple Europe from the United States | en |
| decouple | disconnect or separate; "uncouple the hounds" | en |
| decouple | The tendency for the surface wind to become much lighter than wind above it at night when the surface temperature cools | en |
| decouple | (de-koup'-lay) [French ] Parted; severed (The same as UNCOUPLED ) | en |