separate
— Verb
– English
~ force, take, or pull apart; "He separated the fighting children"; "Moses parted the Red Sea"
separate
— Verb
– English
~ discontinue an association or relation; go different ways; "The business partners broke over a tax question"; "The couple separated after 25 years of marriage"; "My friend and I split up"
separate off
— Verb
– English
~ partition by means of a divider, such as a screen; "screen off this part of the room"
separate
— Verb
– English
~ come apart; "The two pieces that we had glued separated"
separate
— Adjective
– English
~ independent; not united or joint; "a problem consisting of two separate issues"; "they went their separate ways"; "formed a separate church"
separate
— Adjective
– English
~ standing apart; not attached to or supported by anything; "a freestanding bell tower"; "a house with a separate garage"
separate
— Adjective
– English
~ separated according to race, sex, class, or religion; "separate but equal"; "girls and boys in separate classes"
separate
— Adjective
– English
~ have the connection undone; having become separate
separated
— Adjective
– English
~ no longer connected or joined; "a detached part"; "on one side of the island was a hugh rock, almost detached"; "the separated spacecraft will return to their home bases"
separated
— Adjective
– English
~ being or feeling set or kept apart from others; "she felt detached from the group"; "could not remain the isolated figure he had been"- Sherwood Anderson; "thought of herself as alone and separated from the others"; "had a set-apart feeling"