Cleft Definition

klĕft
clefts
adjective
Split; divided.
Webster's New World
Divided by one or more narrow spaces extending more than halfway to the midrib.
Webster's New World
Antonyms:
noun
clefts
An opening made by or as by cleaving; crack; crevice.
Webster's New World
A hollow between two parts.
Webster's New World

A disease of horses; a crack on the band of the pastern.

Wiktionary
Antonyms:
verb
clefts
Webster's New World
Webster's New World
To insert (a scion) into the stock of a plant.
Webster's New World

Simple past tense and past participle of cleave.

Wiktionary
Antonyms:

Other Word Forms of Cleft

Noun

Singular:
cleft
Plural:
clefts

Origin of Cleft

  • Middle English past participle of cleven to split cleave1 N., from Middle English alteration (influenced by cleft) of clift from Old English geclyft gleubh- in Indo-European roots

    From American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition

  • Old English clift; compare Swedish klyft (“cave, den”) cave, den, German Kluft. See cleave.

    From Wiktionary

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