英:['sepərɪtnɪs]
美:['sepərɪtnɪs]
英:['sepərɪtnɪs]
美:['sepərɪtnɪs]
词根:separate
adj.separate 单独的;分开的
separated 分开的;分居;不在一起生活的
separable 可分离的;可分隔的
separatist 分离主义者的
separative 分离性的;倾向分离的;区别性的
adv.separately 分别地;分离地;个别地
separably 可区分地;可分离地
n.separate 分开;抽印本
separation 分离,分开;间隔,距离;[法] 分居;缺口
separator 分离器;[计] 分隔符
separatist 分离主义者;独立派
separatism 分离主义
separability [数] 可分性,分离性
v.separated 分开;隔开(separate的过去式和过去分词)
vi.separate 分开;隔开;分居
vt.separate 使分离;使分开;使分居
verb
transitive verb
to set or keep apart : disconnect, sever
to make a distinction between : discriminate, distinguish
separate religion from magic
sort
separate mail
to disperse in space or time : scatter
widely separated homesteads
archaic to set aside for a special purpose : choose, dedicate
to part by a legal separation:
to sever conjugal ties with
to sever contractual relations with : discharge
was separated from the army
to block off : segregate
to isolate from a mixture : extract
separate cream from milk
to divide into constituent parts
to dislocate (something, such as a shoulder) especially in sports
intransitive verb
to become divided or detached
to sever an association : withdraw
to cease to live together as a married couple
to go in different directions
to become isolated from a mixture
the crystals separated out
adjective
set or kept apart : detached
archaic solitary, secluded
immaterial, disembodied
not shared with another : individual
separate rooms
often capitalized estranged from a parent body
separate churches
existing by itself : autonomous
a separate country
dissimilar in nature or identity
consulted five separate authorities
noun
offprint
an article of dress designed to be worn interchangeably with others to form various costume combinations—usually used in plural
Verb, Adjective, and Noun Middle English, from Latin separatus, past participle of separare, from se- apart + parare to prepare, procure — more at secede, pare
The first known use of separate was in the 15th century
separationnoun
the act or process of separating : the state of being separated
a point or line of division
a space that comes between things : gap
the separation between wheel spokes
a formal separating of spouses by agreement but without divorce
the ending of a relationship that is bound by a contract (as employment or military service)
separationnoun
the act or process of separating : the state of being separated
a point or line of division
a space that comes between things : gap
the separation between wheel spokes
a formal separating of spouses by agreement but without divorce
the ending of a relationship that is bound by a contract (as employment or military service)
separate1 of 3verb
to set or keep apart
separate the pages with a slip of paper
to make a distinction between : distinguish
separate fact from fiction
sort entry 2 sense 1
separate mail
to spread widely in space or time : scatter
widely separated homesteads
to end a relationship with that is bound by a contract
separated from the army
to isolate or become isolated from a mixture
separate cream from milk
to become divided or detached : come apart
to cease to live together as a married couple
to go in different directions
separate2 of 3adjective
set or kept apart
the motel contains fifty separate units
not shared with another : individual
separate rooms
having independent existence
the separate pieces of a puzzle
separate3 of 3noun
an article of dress designed to be worn interchangeably with others to form different outfits—usually used in plural
1 Yet her father’s illness destabilizes that sense of self-sufficiency and separateness — particularly during a season of pandemic isolation.
2 “We need to, once again, come up with a new rhythm of how we create separateness and togetherness. It’s a fundamental task.”
3 Oil and water separate when combined together.
4 As players start to separate themselves in certain position battles, here are a few things to watch for:Will Sutton participate?
5 The National Party formalized racial segregation policies in a system known as apartheid, an Afrikaans word that means “apartness” or “separateness.”
6 I was not satisfied till that barrier was broken down, till that separateness was destroyed.
我无法满足,直到那个障碍被拆除, 直到那个分别被摧毁.
7 Like others who know the pain of public alienation, we transformed the knowledge of our public separateness and made it consoling—the reminder of intimacy.
8 But the point is that all parents are estranged, continually and suddenly waking up to how their children are growing, progressively assuming the separateness and privacy of adulthood.
9 “By having everybody singing a different thing, there’s a sense of them together as this family, and yet there’s a cacophonous separateness.”
10 He told us that God himself had created the diversity of the universe and that his plan was for unity, not separateness.
11 We use the same Internet service provider but have separate accounts.
12 On my last visit to Lucio, I went with a Spanish TV starlet whose sultry looks helped us land a prime table. Dining at separate tables around us were the Duchess of Badajoz, the king's sister; novelist Mario Vargas Llosa; and a gentleman rumored to be Spain's richest man.
13 The normal way we act in the world fosters an attitude of separateness and causes us to act against nature or in ways that resist the natural way.
14 Most of our prepositions suggest separateness from the weather world.
15 With my father speaking in German, that separateness had evaporated.
16 The fact is that Washington has relaxed financial regulations under both Democratic and Republican administrations, opening the doors to conflicts of interest between brokers and investment bankers. In 1998, government, despite concerns, refused to separate consulting and auditing business.
17 “You don’t have the same sense of separateness” typical of Chinese immigration in other parts of Italy, where the new arrivals are more segregated and cut off from mainstream society, he said.
18 Apartheid, an Afrikaans word with Dutch origins, means, literally, “separateness, or a state of being apart.”
19 Belfast is trying to move on, yet a visit to these neighborhoods broadcasts separateness with its fences and gates known as “peace lines.”
20 They are individuals who represent some of the ethnic diversity of the big city, and the separateness of the lives it tenuously, randomly, brings together.