Need another word that means the same as “segregate”? Find 4 synonyms and 30 related words for “segregate” in this overview.
Table Of Contents:
The synonyms of “Segregate” are: separate, set apart, keep apart, sort out
Segregate as a Verb
Definitions of "Segregate" as a verb
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “segregate” as a verb can have the following definitions:
- (of pairs of alleles) be separated at meiosis and transmitted independently via separate gametes.
- Separate or isolate (one thing) from another and place in a group apart from others.
- Separate or divide along racial, sexual, or religious lines.
- Set apart from the rest or from each other; isolate or divide.
- Divide from the main body or mass and collect.
- Separate by race or religion; practice a policy of racial segregation.
Synonyms of "Segregate" as a verb (4 Words)
keep apart | Continue a certain state, condition, or activity. |
separate | Separate into parts or portions. Six years separated the two brothers. |
set apart | Urge to attack someone. |
sort out | Arrange or order by classes or categories. |
Usage Examples of "Segregate" as a verb
- Many towns segregated into new counties.
- Experiments show clearly that genes segregate.
- The gene pairs segregate at reduction division.
- Apprehensions about groups segregated from the rest of society.
- The sun segregates the carbon.
- Large mining claims are segregated into smaller claims.
- This neighborhood is segregated.
- Black people were segregated in churches, schools, and colleges.
- We don't segregate in this county.
Associations of "Segregate" (30 Words)
alienate | Make withdrawn or isolated or emotionally dissociated. An urban environment which would alienate its inhabitants. |
alienation | The state or experience of being alienated. Unemployment may generate a sense of political alienation. |
alone | Without others’ help or participation; single-handedly. Team members are more effective than individuals working alone. |
antagonize | (of a substance) act as an antagonist of (a substance or its action. Don t antagonize your boss. |
clannish | (of a group or their activities) tending to exclude others outside the group. They are a clannish lot with no time for foreigners. |
complacent | Showing smug or uncritical satisfaction with oneself or one’s achievements. He had become complacent after years of success. |
detachment | Avoiding emotional involvement. He felt a sense of detachment from what was going on. |
dissociate | (especially in abstract contexts) disconnect or separate. The word spiritual has become for many dissociated from religion. |
distinguish | Make conspicuous or noteworthy. It was too dark to distinguish anything more than their vague shapes. |
division | A group of organisms forming a subdivision of a larger category. The division of the land into small fields. |
divorce | Get a divorce formally terminate a marriage. A desire to divorce myself from history. |
estrange | Remove from customary environment or associations. Years of boarding school estranged the child from her home. |
estrangement | The fact of no longer being on friendly terms or part of a social group. The growing estrangement of the police from their communities. |
extradite | Hand over (a person accused or convicted of a crime) to the jurisdiction of the foreign state in which the crime was committed. Brazil refused to extradite him to Britain. |
insular | Relating to the insula of the brain. Insular illumination of the 6th century. |
isolate | A culture of microorganisms isolated for study. The medical world would never come to grips with polio until it could isolate the virus which caused it. |
isolated | Being or feeling set or kept apart from others. Tiny isolated villages remote from centers of civilization. |
isolation | Denoting a hospital or ward for patients with infectious diseases. He opposed a policy of American isolation. |
quarantine | Place a person or animal in quarantine in order to prevent the spread of an infectious disease. They had to quarantine infected households. |
remote | A remote control device. Remote stars. |
rift | A major fault separating blocks of the earth s surface a rift valley. The Indian landmass rifted from Madagascar about 90 million years ago. |
schism | The formal separation of a church into two churches or the withdrawal of one group over doctrinal differences. The persistence of this group could produce schism within society. |
seclude | Keep (someone) away from other people. I secluded myself up here for a life of study and meditation. |
secluded | Hidden from general view or use. The gardens are quiet and secluded. |
separate | A garment that can be purchased separately and worn in combinations with other garments. We cannot separate his thinking from his activity. |
separation | The space where a division or parting occurs. Prose structured into short sentences with meaningful separation into paragraphs. |
sequester | Requisition forcibly, as of enemy property. Non precipitating water softeners use complex phosphates to sequester calcium and magnesium ions. |
severance | A personal or social separation (as between opposing factions. A complete severance of links with the Republic. |
sole | Put a new sole on to a shoe. The sole heir. |
underpopulated | Having an insufficient or very small population. The richly endowed but underpopulated Ivory Coast. |