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Webster's New World College Dictionary » segregative
segregative
Variant of segregate
segregate
definition
seg·re·gate (seg′rə gāt′; for adj. & n., usually, -git)
adjective
separate; set apart; segregated
Etymology: ME segregat < L segregatus, pp. of segregare, to set apart, lit., to set apart from the flock < se-, apart (see secede) + grex (gen. gregis), a flock: see gregarious
transitive verb segregated -·gat′ed, segregating -·gat′·ing
to set apart from others or from the main mass or group; isolate; specif., to impose a system of segregation on (racial groups, social facilities, etc.)
intransitive verb
- to separate from the main mass and collect together in a new body: said of crystals
- to separate from others; be segregated
- Genetics to undergo segregation
noun
a segregated person, thing, group, etc.
Related Forms:
- segregative seg′·re·gat′·ive adjective
Webster's New World College Dictionary Copyright © 2009 by Wiley Publishing, Inc., Cleveland, Ohio.
Used by arrangement with John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
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