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