segregation

See also: ségrégation

English

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Etymology

1555.[1] From LatinCategory:English terms derived from Latin#SEGREGATION segregatioCategory:English undefined derivations#SEGREGATION. Morphologically segregate + -ionCategory:English terms suffixed with -ion#SEGREGATION.

Pronunciation

Noun

segregation (countable and uncountable, plural segregations)Category:English lemmas#SEGREGATIONCategory:English nouns#SEGREGATIONCategory:English uncountable nouns#SEGREGATIONCategory:English countable nouns#SEGREGATIONCategory:English countable nouns#SEGREGATIONCategory:English entries with incorrect language header#SEGREGATIONCategory:Pages with entries#SEGREGATIONCategory:Pages with 3 entries#SEGREGATION

  1. The act of setting apart and organizing things based upon their characteristics.
  2. (politicsCategory:en:Politics#SEGREGATION) The separation of people based upon race, sex, religion, or other identity in institutions.
    • 1982 December 18, Siong-huat Chua, Sam Sasha, Philip Fung, “Hong Kong And The Emergence Of An Asian Gay Consciousness”, in Gay Community News, volume 10, number 22, page 9:
      The fact that one is gay or one's brother is gay [] — this has less influence on the average HK person's attention or attitude than how he or she finds a job, the way he lives and the way he eats, which is like New York or oter large cities. There tends to be a segregation between a person's private life and his job or other affairs. It does not mean that they are liberal, just that city life fosters this individualism.
      Category:English terms with quotations#SEGREGATION
  3. (biologyCategory:en:Biology#SEGREGATION) The setting apart in Mendelian inheritance of alleles, such that each parent passes only one allele to its offspring.
  4. (mineralogyCategory:en:Mineralogy#SEGREGATION) Separation from a mass, and gathering about centers or into cavities at hand through cohesive or adhesive attraction or the crystallizing process.
  5. (politicsCategory:en:Politics#SEGREGATION, public policy) The separation of people (geographically, residentially, or in businesses, public transit, etc) into racial or other categories (e.g. religion, sex).
  6. (sociologyCategory:en:Sociology#SEGREGATION) The separation of people (geographically, residentially, or in businesses, public transit, etc) into various categories which occurs due to social forces (culture, etc).
  7. (geneticsCategory:en:Genetics#SEGREGATION) The separation of a pair of chromatids or chromosomes during mitosis and meiosis
  8. Separation for practical reasons, by necessity.
    • 1956 July, “New Works on District Line, L.T.”, in Railway Magazine, page 485:
      It has long been recognised that complete segregation of control of the respective services provided by the two undertakings, and of the power supply, signalling, and tracks relating to each was desirable.
      Category:English terms with quotations#SEGREGATION
  9. The separation of a subset of prisoners from the general prison population, possibly solitary confinement.
    Synonym: seg

Synonyms

Antonyms

Derived terms

Translations

References

  1. James A. H. Murray et al., editors (1884–1928), “Segregation”, in A New English Dictionary on Historical Principles (Oxford English Dictionary), London: Clarendon Press, →OCLC.

Anagrams

Danish

Noun

segregationCategory:Danish lemmas#SEGREGATIONCategory:Danish nouns#SEGREGATIONCategory:Danish entries with incorrect language header#SEGREGATIONCategory:Pages with entries#SEGREGATIONCategory:Pages with 3 entries#SEGREGATION

  1. (sociologyCategory:da:Sociology#SEGREGATION) segregation (of cultures)

Coordinate terms

Swedish

Noun

segregation cCategory:Swedish lemmas#SEGREGATIONCategory:Swedish nouns#SEGREGATIONCategory:Swedish entries with incorrect language header#SEGREGATIONCategory:Swedish common-gender nouns#SEGREGATIONCategory:Pages with entries#SEGREGATIONCategory:Pages with 3 entries#SEGREGATION

  1. segregation
    Antonym: desegregation

Declension

References

Category:Danish lemmas Category:Danish nouns Category:English 4-syllable words Category:English countable nouns Category:English lemmas Category:English nouns Category:English terms derived from Latin Category:English terms suffixed with -ion Category:English terms with IPA pronunciation Category:English terms with audio pronunciation Category:English terms with quotations Category:English uncountable nouns Category:English undefined derivations Category:Entries with translation boxes Category:Pages with 3 entries Category:Pages with entries Category:Swedish common-gender nouns Category:Swedish lemmas Category:Swedish nouns Category:Terms with Bulgarian translations Category:Terms with Catalan translations Category:Terms with Danish translations Category:Terms with Estonian translations Category:Terms with Finnish translations Category:Terms with French translations Category:Terms with Georgian translations Category:Terms with German translations Category:Terms with Indonesian translations Category:Terms with Malay translations Category:Terms with Māori translations Category:Terms with Norwegian Bokmål translations Category:Terms with Norwegian Nynorsk translations Category:Terms with Persian translations Category:Terms with Portuguese translations Category:Terms with Russian translations Category:Terms with Scottish Gaelic translations Category:Terms with Spanish translations Category:Terms with Swedish translations Category:Terms with Tok Pisin translations Category:Terms with Turkish translations Category:Terms with Ukrainian translations Category:da:Sociology Category:en:Biology Category:en:Genetics Category:en:Mineralogy Category:en:Politics Category:en:Sociology