v. [f. as prec. + -IZE.] trans. To break into fragments.

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1815.  Murray, Lett. Byron, in Smiles, Life (1891), I. xv. 354. I do think that you should fragmentize the first hundred [lines], and condense the last thirty, of ‘Corinth,’ and then you have, in words of the highest compliment, two poems (as Mr. H. said) as good as any you have written.

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1885.  W. C. Russell, Strange Voy., I. xiii. 182. You can dissect her and resolve her components into bits of timber or plates of iron, and fragmentize her into a medley of spars, ropes, and planks.

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