- segregate (verb)
- ликвировать, сегрегировать, выделяться, зейгеровать, расслаиваться
Англо-русский глоссарий алюминиевой промышленности. 2011.
Англо-русский глоссарий алюминиевой промышленности. 2011.
segregate — ► VERB 1) set apart from the rest or from each other. 2) separate along racial, sexual, or religious lines. ORIGIN Latin segregare separate from the flock … English terms dictionary
segregate — verb routes that will segregate passenger cars from tractor trailers Syn: separate, set apart, keep apart, isolate, quarantine, closet; partition, divide, detach, disconnect, sever, dissociate; marginalize, ghettoize Ant: amalgamate … Thesaurus of popular words
segregate — verb (segregated, segregating) –verb (t) /ˈsɛgrəgeɪt / (say segruhgayt) 1. to separate or set apart from the others or from the main body; isolate. 2. to impose a policy of segregation on (a specific racial, religious or other group). 3. to… …
segregate — verb ADVERB ▪ strictly PREPOSITION ▪ according to, by ▪ Jobs were strictly segregated by gender. ▪ from … Collocations dictionary
segregate — verb sɛgrɪgeɪt 1》 set apart from the rest or from each other. 2》 separate along racial, sexual, or religious lines. 3》 Genetics (of pairs of alleles) be separated at meiosis and transmitted independently via separate gametes. noun sɛgrɪgət 1》… … English new terms dictionary
segregate — verb (transitive often passive) to separate one group of people from others, especially because they are of a different race, sex or religion: Blacks were segregated from whites in churches, schools and colleges … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
segregate — verb Syn: separate, set apart, keep apart, isolate, quarantine, partition, divide, discriminate against Ant: integrate … Synonyms and antonyms dictionary
segregate — [[t]se̱grɪgeɪt[/t]] segregates, segregating, segregated VERB To segregate two groups of people or things means to keep them physically apart from each other. [V n] A large detachment of police was used to segregate the two rival camps of… … English dictionary
segregate — UK [ˈseɡrɪɡeɪt] / US [ˈseɡrəˌɡeɪt] verb [transitive] Word forms segregate : present tense I/you/we/they segregate he/she/it segregates present participle segregating past tense segregated past participle segregated to separate groups of people or … English dictionary
segregate — seg|re|gate [ segrə,geıt ] verb transitive to separate groups of people or things, especially because of race, sex, or religion. To integrate these groups means to bring them together: The army has decided not to segregate men and women during… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
segregate — [16] The etymological idea underlying segregate is of ‘removal from a flock’. The word comes from Latin sēgregāre, a compound verb formed from the prefix sē ‘apart’ and grex ‘flock’ (source also of English aggregate, congregation, egregious [16] … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins