From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishdisassociatedis‧as‧so‧ci‧ate /ˌdɪsəˈsəʊʃieɪt, -sieɪt $ -ˈsoʊ-/ verb [transitive] x-refanother form of dissociate→ See Verb table
Examples from the Corpus
disassociate• When one of the fattest hailed him when he was out shopping he decided he must disassociate himself from that crowd.• But Coun Jackson said he, also, disassociated himself with her remarks.• The need to disassociate oneself from it then follows.• However, they can still disassociate themselves from the apology.• Dealers have felt a need to deprecate their own firms' values, to disassociate themselves from them.• Hope and Digby Wyatt immediately disassociated themselves from Tite's comments.• In this situation, abject apologies in some respects remain complicit with the patronizing attitudes from which they attempt to disassociate themselves.• In this agent-dominated world, brands will be quickly disassociated with visual trademarks, since people will rarely see them.