Disunite vs Division - What's the difference?
disunite | division |
To cause disagreement or alienation among or within.
* 1516 , , Utopia , "Of Their Military Discipline":
* 1863 , , Hard Cash , ch. 44:
To separate, sever, or split.
* 1899 , , Jennie Baxter, Journalist , ch. 16:
To disintegrate; to come apart.
* 1843 , , A Blot In The 'Scutcheon , Act I:
(uncountable) The act or process of dividing anything.
Each of the separate parts of something resulting from division.
(arithmetic, uncountable) The process of dividing a number by another.
(arithmetic) A calculation that involves this process.
(military) A formation, usually made up of two or three brigades.
A section of a large company.
(biology, taxonomy) A rank (Latin divisio ) below kingdom and above class, particularly used of plants]] or [[fungus, fungi, also (particularly of animals) called a phylum; a taxon at that rank
A disagreement; a difference of viewpoint between two sides of an argument.
(music) A florid instrumental variation of a melody in the 17th and 18th centuries, originally conceived as the dividing of each of a succession of long notes into several short ones.
(music) A set of pipes in a pipe organ which are independently controlled and supplied.
(legal) A concept whereby a common group of debtors are only responsible for their proportionate sum of the total debt.
(computing) Any of the four major parts of a COBOL program source code
(UK, Eton College) A lesson; a class.
As a verb disunite
is to cause disagreement or alienation among or within.As a noun division is
division.disunite
English
Verb
- If they cannot disunite them by domestic broils, then they engage their neighbours against them.
- Secrets disunite a family.
- I have discovered how to disunite that force and that particle.
- You cannot bind me more to you, my lord.
- Farewell till we renew... I trust, renew
- A converse ne'er to disunite again.
Anagrams
* ----division
English
(wikipedia division)Noun
- I've got ten divisions to do for my homework.
- Magnolias belong to the division Magnoliophyta.