segregate 的 3 个定义
seg·re·gat·ed, seg·re·gat·ing.
- to separate or set apart from others or from the main body or group; isolate: to segregate exceptional children; to segregate hardened criminals.
- to require, by law or custom, the separation of from the dominant majority.
seg·re·gat·ed, seg·re·gat·ing.
- to separate, withdraw, or go apart; separate from the main body and collect in one place; become segregated.
- to practice, require, or enforce segregation, especially racial segregation.
- Genetics. to separate during meiosis.
- a segregated thing, person, or group.
segregate 近义词
discriminate and separate
更多segregate例句
- Americans even segregate politically, leading to 90-10 voting patterns in thousands of precincts.
- They will do much more than segregate parks and bakeries, which they are already doing.
- The men and women largely self-segregate into gendered rows as is common in synagogue.
- You segregate all of your other second-class citizens and pretend you have Liberté, Egalité, Fraternité, but you do not.
- Even one of the Brookings scholars told me that the Brotherhood would probably segregate the sexes.
- Thus, to trace it, the autopsy doctors would have to find, separate or segregate a billionth bit of the mass under observation.
- No attempt is made to segregate the entries by year, since we are interested in the total, not the annual increment.
- Any motive that will not so segregate men and break up all other bonds cannot be said to be a very fertile cause of war.
- It was this “shadow of a sickness,” that served to segregate Margaret to the extent that was really necessary for her well being.
- He meant to fence off side canyons and to segregate droves of his hogs, and to raise abundance of corn for winter feed.