If you pull something apart, you break or divide it into small pieces, often in order to put them back together again in a different way. If I wanted to improve the car significantly I would have to pull it apart and start again
A kind of stroke by which a leg ball is sent to the off side, or an off ball to the side
= Used product that was integrated into something These are typically removed from systems that were upgraded after being delivered to the customer
When a driver or vehicle pulls to a stop or a halt, the vehicle stops. He pulled to a stop behind a pickup truck
When a vehicle, animal, or person pulls a cart or piece of machinery, they are attached to it or hold it, so that it moves along behind them when they move forward. This is early-20th-century rural Sussex, when horses still pulled the plough
a device used for pulling something; "he grabbed the pull and opened the drawer"
also, to force a particular card to be played ("My Ace of Trump pulled Pat's Ten [because Pat had to follow suit] ")
{i} act of grabbing and drawing away; influence; press proof, test print used for proofreading before a print run (Printing); handle, grip
To pull a stunt or a trick on someone means to do something dramatic or silly in order to get their attention or trick them. Everyone saw the stunt you pulled on me