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Etymology edit

From Middle English disseveren, from Anglo-Norman desevrer, Old French dessevrer, from Vulgar Latin *dissēperō, dissēperāre, from Latin dis- + sēparō.

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Verb edit

dissever (third-person singular simple present dissevers, present participle dissevering, simple past and past participle dissevered) (transitive)

  1. To separate (two or more things); to split apart (something).
  2. To divide (something) into separate parts.
    If the bridge is destroyed, the shores are dissevered.
    • 1844, George Miles Coverdale, Writings and Translations of Myles Coverdale:
      When the corn is threshed, the kernel lieth mixed among the chaff, and afterward are they dissevered asunder with the fan or windle; even so the people in the church do first hear the preaching of God's word; now some stumble, repine, and are offended at it, and others are not offended, and yet they dwell together, one with another; but when they are fanned or windled, and when the wind of trouble and affliction beginneth once to blow, then is it easy to sunder and to know the one from the other, the faithful from the unfaithful.

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