Subdivision vs Coterie - What's the difference?
subdivision | coterie | Related terms |
(countable, uncountable) a division into smaller pieces of something that has already been divided; to separate something
(countable) such a piece that has been divided
(countable) a parcel of land that has been divided into lots
(countable) a group of houses created by the same builder or in the same general area
A circle of people who associate with one another.
An exclusive group of people, who associate closely for a common purpose; a clique.
A communal burrow of prairie dogs.
* 2000 , Edward O. Wilson, Sociobiology: The New Synthesis , page 473:
* 2001 , Jeffrey Moussaieff Masson, The Emperor's Embrace: The Evolution of Fatherhood :
* 2009 , Miriam Aronin, The Prairie Dog's Town: A Perfect Hideaway , page 22:
Subdivision is a related term of coterie.
As nouns the difference between subdivision and coterie
is that subdivision is (countable|uncountable) a division into smaller pieces of something that has already been divided; to separate something while coterie is a circle of people who associate with one another.subdivision
English
Noun
- Subdivide the sentence into pieces and understand it a bit at a time.
- Work on one subdivision at a time.
- They're putting in a new subdivision out past Black Ranch Road.
Derived terms
*coterie
English
Noun
(en noun)- The new junior employee joined our merry after-hours coterie .
- A tightly-knit coterie of executive powerbrokers made all the real decisions in the company.
- The coterie was located in the middle of our wheat field.
- The population of each coterie' constantly changes over a period of a few months or years, by death, birth, and emigration. But the ' coterie boundary remains about the same, being learned by each prairie dog born into it.
- The odd part of prairie dog life is that this friendly state exists only among the members of each coterie', and does not extend between ' coteries .
- The Town Grows Young prairie dogs in a coterie are brothers and sisters. They have the same father and sometimes the same mother. To find a mate from a different family, young prairie dogs must travel to a new area.
