| separate | | |
| offprint, reprint, separate | (n.) | a separately printed article that originally appeared in a larger publication. |
| separate | (n.) | a garment that can be purchased separately and worn in combinations with other garments. |
| divide, separate | (v.) | act as a barrier between; stand between.; "The mountain range divides the two countries" |
| disunite, divide, part, separate | (v.) | force, take, or pull apart.; "He separated the fighting children"; "Moses parted the Red Sea" |
| differentiate, distinguish, secern, secernate, separate, severalise, severalize, tell, tell apart | (v.) | mark as different.; "We distinguish several kinds of maple" |
| carve up, dissever, divide, separate, split, split up | (v.) | separate into parts or portions.; "divide the cake into three equal parts"; "The British carved up the Ottoman Empire after World War I" |
| separate | (v.) | divide into components or constituents.; "Separate the wheat from the chaff" |
| assort, class, classify, separate, sort, sort out | (v.) | arrange or order by classes or categories.; "How would you classify these pottery shards--are they prehistoric?" |
| divide, separate | (v.) | make a division or separation. |
| break, break up, part, separate, split, split up | (v.) | discontinue an association or relation; go different ways.; "The business partners broke over a tax question"; "The couple separated after 25 years of marriage"; "My friend and I split up" |
| part, separate, split | (v.) | go one's own way; move apart.; "The friends separated after the party" |
| break, come apart, fall apart, separate, split up | (v.) | become separated into pieces or fragments.; "The figurine broke"; "The freshly baked loaf fell apart" |
| discriminate, separate, single out | (v.) | treat differently on the basis of sex or race. |
| divide, part, separate | (v.) | come apart.; "The two pieces that we had glued separated" |
| branch, fork, furcate, ramify, separate | (v.) | divide into two or more branches so as to form a fork.; "The road forks" |
| separate | (adj.) | independent; not united or joint.; "a problem consisting of two separate issues"; "they went their separate ways"; "formed a separate church" |
| freestanding, separate | (adj.) | standing apart; not attached to or supported by anything.; "a freestanding bell tower"; "a house with a separate garage" |
| separate | (adj.) | separated according to race, sex, class, or religion.; "separate but equal"; "girls and boys in separate classes" |
| disjoined, separate | (adj.) | have the connection undone; having become separate. |
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