Separate | Mean of separate in English Dictionary

/ˈsɛpərət/

  • not joined, connected, or combined
    1. two separate buildings
    2. There are separate restrooms for men and women.
    3. The boys/girls have separate rooms.
    4. They slept in separate beds.
    5. We use the same Internet service provider but have separate accounts.
    6. The company broke up into three separate [=independent] entities.
    7. Each state has a separate set of laws [=has its own set of laws] concerning marriage.
    8. He tries to keep his private life and public life separate (from each other). = He tries to keep his private life separate from his public life.
  • different from something else
    1. I met him on four separate [=different] occasions.
    2. That's an entirely separate issue.
  • to end a relationship with someone
    1. After 20 years of marriage, they decided to go their separate ways.
  • to go in different directions after being together
    1. After dinner we went our separate ways.
  • Verb
  • to cause (two or more people or things) to stop being together, joined, or connected
    1. He separated the fighters (from each other).
    2. They described the process used to separate cream from milk.
    3. (US) He fell and separated [=dislocated] his shoulder. [=caused the bone in his shoulder to move out of its proper position]
  • to be between (two things or people)
    1. A river separates the two towns. = The two towns are separated by a river. [=there is a river between the two towns]
    2. A great distance separated the sisters from each other.
  • to stop being together, joined, or connected
    1. They walked together to the corner, but then they separated and went their separate ways.
    2. The main group separated into several smaller groups.
    3. Oil and water separate when combined together.
    4. The oil separated from the water.
    5. The salt crystals separated out of the liquid.
  • to stop living with a husband, wife, or partner
    1. They separated six months after their wedding.
    2. She separated from her boyfriend last week.
  • to see or describe the differences between (two things)
    1. We need to separate [=distinguish] fact and/from fiction.
  • to be the quality that makes (people or things) different
    1. Their personalities and political beliefs separate them.
    2. Our ability to reason is what separates us from animals.
  • to cause (someone or something) to be separate from other people or things
    1. He separated himself off from the crowd in the subway.
  • to remove (someone or something) from a group
    1. Before you put out the trash, you have to separate out the bottles and cans.
    2. Most schools separate out children with learning problems.
  • to show which people are really strong, brave, etc., and which are not
    1. The competition has been easy to this point, but now it gets tough and we'll really begin to separate the men from the boys.
  • to judge which people or things in a group are bad and which ones are good
    1. The magazine describes many different products and then separates the sheep from the goats.
cfdict.com
How To 60s

HowTo60s.com Chia sẻ Thủ Thuật Máy Tính, Kinh nghiệm, mẹo vặt hay trong cuộc sống hàng ngày

Bài viết mới nhất