exciselike
Exciselike is an adjective used to describe something that resembles or mimics the act of excision, that is, the act of cutting out or removing a part. The term can be applied to physical, conceptual, or procedural contexts where there is a noteworthy, well-defined removal or separation of a component, tissue, or content. In medical and biological writing, exciselike margins might refer to boundaries that resemble those produced by an excisional biopsy or surgical removal, characterized by clear, abrupt, or well-defined edges. In other domains, it can be used metaphorically to describe data trimming, patterning of segmentation, or design features that give the impression of a cut-away or removal.
Etymology: the word is formed from excise plus the adjectival suffix -like, with excise deriving from Latin
Usage notes: Exciselike is not a widely standardized term and its meaning can vary by discipline. It
Examples: A lesion with exciselike margins; an exciselike pruning of a dataset; an architecture featuring exciselike