What is another word for subdivided?

Pronunciation: [sˌʌbdɪvˈa͡ɪdɪd] (IPA)

Subdivided is a term used to describe something that has been divided or broken down into smaller sections. Some synonyms for this word include partitioned, segmented, separated, compartmentalized, fragmented, and split. These words all refer to the process of dividing something into smaller, more manageable parts. Other synonyms that can be used for subdivided include fragmented, dispersed, dispersed, and separated. Whether you are talking about a piece of land, a large organization, or a complex problem, these words can all be used interchangeably to describe the process of breaking something down into smaller parts. Using synonyms like these can help you give your writing or speech more variety and nuance, while also making it more engaging and memorable.

What are the paraphrases for Subdivided?

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What are the hypernyms for Subdivided?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

Usage examples for Subdivided

This class is furthermore subdivided into the self-restoring and the non-self-restoring varieties.
"Hertzian Wave Wireless Telegraphy"
John Ambrose Fleming
The last of the three is divided into classes, and all of them are divided into grants or votes, which are in turn subdivided into subheads and items.
"The Government of England (Vol. I)"
A. Lawrence Lowell
But the Galba party was again subdivided into two factions.
"St. Peter's Umbrella"
Kálmán Mikszáth

Famous quotes with Subdivided

  • Cleanthes, a Stoic, subdivided the three divisions, and made six: Dialectic and Rhetoric, comprised in Logic; Ethic and Politic; Physic and Theology. This division was merely for practical use, for all Philosophy is one.
    George Long (scholar)
  • The unremitting division of labour resulted in admirable levels of productivity. The company’s success appeared to bear out the principles of efficiency laid down at the turn of the twentieth century by the Italian economist Vilfredo Pareto, who theorized that a society would grow wealthy to the extent that its members forfeited general knowledge in favour of fostering individual ability in narrowly constricted fields. In an ideal Paretan economy, jobs would be ever more finely subdivided to allow for the accumulation of complex skills, which would then be traded among workers. … But however great the economic advantages of segmenting the elements of an afternoon’s work into a range of forty-year-long careers, there was reason to wonder about the unintended side effects of doing so. In particular, one felt tempted to ask … how meaningful the lives might feel as a result.
    Alain de Botton
  • The real issue is not whether baking biscuits is meaningful, but the extent to which the activity can seem to be so after it has been continuously stretched and subdivided across five thousand lives.
    Alain de Botton
  • In the Islamic world, from the beginning, Islam was the primary basis of both identity and loyalty. We think of a nation subdivided into religions. They think, rather, of a religion subdivided into nations. It is the ultimate definition, the prime definition and the one that determines, as I said, not only identity, but also basic loyalty. And this is quite independent of religious belief. In Islam, there isn't or rather, there wasn't until recently any such thing as the church, in the Christian sense of that word. The mosque is a place of worship. It's a building, a place of worship and study. And in that sense, it is the equivalent of the church. But in the sense of an institution with a hierarchy and its own laws and usages, there was no such thing in Islam until very recently. And one of the achievements of the Islamic Revolution in Iran has been to endow an Islamic country for the first time with the equivalents of a pope, a college of cardinals, a bench of bishops and, above all, an inquisition. All these were previously unknown and nonexistent in the Islamic world.
    Bernard Lewis
  • Eliza and I composed a precocious critique of the Constitution of the United States of America … We argued that is was as good a scheme for misery as any, since its success in keeping the common people reasonably happy and proud depended on the strength of the people themselves — and yet it prescribed no practical machinery which would tend to make the people, as opposed to their elected representatives, strong. We said it was possible that the framers of the Constitution were blind to the beauty of persons who were without great wealth or powerful friends or public office, but who were nonetheless genuinely strong. We thought it was more likely, though, that their framers had not noticed that it was natural, and therefore almost inevitable, that human beings in extraordinary and enduring situations should think of themselves of composing new families. Eliza and I pointed out that this happened no less in democracies than in tyrannies, since human beings were the same the wide world over, and civilized only yesterday. Elected representatives, hence, could be expected to become members of the famous and powerful family of elected representatives — which would, perfectly naturally, make them wary and squeamish and stingy with respect to all the other sorts of families which, again, perfectly naturally, subdivided mankind. Eliza and I … proposed that the Constitution be amended so as to guarantee that every citizen, no matter how humble, or crazy or incompetent or deformed, somehow be given membership in some family as covertly xenophobic and crafty as the one their public servants formed.
    Kurt Vonnegut

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