partition
a division into or distribution in portions or shares: Upon the magnate's death, the family began the complicated partition of his possessions.
a separation, as of two or more things: The Renaissance was marked by the partition of religion and philosophy.
something that separates or divides: Is the partition between menswear and womenswear finally falling in the fashion industry?
an interior wall or barrier dividing a room, area of a building, enclosure, etc., into separate areas: There was a sliding, floor-to-ceiling partition between the bedroom and the living area.
a part, division, or section: One partition of the barn was filled with hay, and he burrowed into it to hide.
a septum or dissepiment, as in a plant or animal structure.
the division of a country or territory into separate, usually differing political entities: Movement of goods and labor was fairly free between the UK and Ireland after partition—until the Troubles.
Usually Par·ti·tion . the division of a large part of the Indian subcontinent into India and Pakistan in 1947: A decade after Partition, many families were still choosing to migrate to Pakistan.
Law. a division of property among joint owners or tenants in common or a sale of such property followed by a division of the proceeds.
Computers. a section of storage space on a hard disk or device, devoted to a particular type of information and read and written to by the operating system or systems as if it were a separate disk or device: This suite of tools allows you to maximize disk space by creating, resizing, moving, merging, and splitting partitions without losing data.
Logic. the act of analyzing a whole by breaking it down into its constituent parts.
Mathematics.
a mode of separating a positive whole number into a sum of positive whole numbers.
the decomposition of a set into disjoint subsets whose union is the original set: A partition of the set (1, 2, 3, 4, 5) is the collection of subsets (1), (2, 3), (4), and (5).
Rhetoric. (in a speech organized on classical principles) the second, usually brief section or part in which a speaker announces the chief lines of thought to be discussed in support of their theme.
to divide into parts, sections, or portions: In Western culture, our lives tend to be partitioned into distinct domains, making it almost impossible to view life as a whole.
to divide or separate by interior walls, barriers, or the like (sometimes followed by off): They partitioned off a dormitory into cubicles.
to divide (a country or territory) into separate, usually differing political entities: The Geneva Accord partitioned Vietnam at the 17th parallel, with a Communist-led North and the Republic of Vietnam in the South.: Compare Balkanize (def. 1).
Law. to divide property among several owners, either in specie or by sale and division of the proceeds.
Computers. to divide (a hard disk or the data stored in it) into sections for different kinds of information, to be read and written to by the operating system or systems as if each section were a separate disk or device: I partitioned the drive, storing my media library separately from my operating system and games.
Origin of partition
1synonym study For partition
Other words for partition
Opposites for partition
Other words from partition
- par·ti·tion·a·ble, adjective
- par·ti·tion·ar·y, adjective
- par·ti·tion·er, par·ti·tion·ist, noun
- par·ti·tion·ment, noun
- pre·par·ti·tion, noun, verb (used with object)
- sub·par·ti·tion, noun
- sub·par·ti·tioned, adjective
- sub·par·ti·tion·ment, noun
- un·par·ti·tioned, adjective
Words Nearby partition
Dictionary.com Unabridged Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2024
How to use partition in a sentence
For face-to-face teaching, engineering measures such as ventilation, partition shields and filtration units can directly remove particles from the air.
When COVID-19 Superspreaders Are Talking, Where You Sit In The Room Matters | LGBTQ-Editor | October 11, 2020 | No Straight NewsYes, there was a sign on the door indicating masking was required, and plexiglass partitions had been placed at checkout counters.
To retain customers, businesses need to make them feel as safe as possible. Here’s how | jakemeth | October 2, 2020 | FortuneCheckout clerks scanned your items from behind a plexiglass partition and placed them back in your cart.
To retain customers, businesses need to make them feel as safe as possible. Here’s how | jakemeth | October 2, 2020 | FortuneCalled sneeze guards or partitions, such barriers help limit someone’s exhaled virus from spreading to another.
Here’s how COVID-19 is changing classes this year | Bethany Brookshire | September 8, 2020 | Science News For StudentsAll of this change is costing brands a lot as more staff are needed for increased sanitization, partitions and other safety barriers are installed, hand sanitizer is provided, and more.
SEO in the second half of 2020: Five search opportunities to act on now | Jim Yu | August 17, 2020 | Search Engine Watch
In short, Pakistan is an aggrieved state that got the short end of the stick when partition happened.
CIA Agents Assess: How Real Is ‘Homeland’? | Chuck Cogan, John MacGaffin | December 15, 2014 | THE DAILY BEASTHe joins Donohue in flanking the man as he disappears behind a partition and from camera view.
Inside, piled desks covered in sheets in the hallways partition makeshift rooms for the families.
But of course no one in Moscow has anything to do with the “little green men” trying to partition Ukraine.
He has called the 1947 partition the “biggest blunder in history” and advocates peace with India.
Altaf Hussain Finally Arrested in London; Can His MQM Be Neutralized? | Bruce Riedel | June 3, 2014 | THE DAILY BEASTDown there in the office, while I stood behind a partition and nobody saw me—I would hide anywhere to keep out of a quarrel!
Dorothy at Skyrie | Evelyn RaymondIt was such a partition as is effected by hacking a living man limb from limb.
The History of England from the Accession of James II. | Thomas Babington MacaulayThe partition planned at Loo was the partition of an ill governed empire which was not a nation.
The History of England from the Accession of James II. | Thomas Babington MacaulayThe partition planned at Loo was therefore the very opposite of the partition of Poland.
The History of England from the Accession of James II. | Thomas Babington MacaulayOne wound the partition would undoubtedly have inflicted, a wound on the Castilian pride.
The History of England from the Accession of James II. | Thomas Babington Macaulay
British Dictionary definitions for partition
/ (pɑːˈtɪʃən) /
a division into parts; separation
something that separates, such as a large screen dividing a room in two
a part or share
a division of a country into two or more separate nations
property law a division of property, esp realty, among joint owners
maths any of the ways by which an integer can be expressed as a sum of integers
logic maths
the division of a class into a number of disjoint and exhaustive subclasses
such a set of subclasses
biology a structure that divides or separates
rhetoric the second part of a speech where the chief lines of thought are announced
(often foll by off) to separate or apportion into sections: to partition a room off with a large screen
to divide (a country) into two or more separate nations
property law to divide (property, esp realty) among joint owners, by dividing either the property itself or the proceeds of sale
Origin of partition
1Derived forms of partition
- partitioner or partitionist, noun
Collins English Dictionary - Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
Cultural definitions for partition
The New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy, Third Edition Copyright © 2005 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
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