redivision
noun[CorU]
(alsore-division)uk/ˌriː.dɪˈvɪʒ.ən/us/ˌriː.dɪˈvɪʒ.ən/theactofseparatingsomething intopartsorgroupsagain, for a second, third, etc.time, or the way that it isseparated:
Archaicinheritancelawshavemeantaconstantdivisionand redivisionofthelandinto littleplots.
Theunionproposedsolutionsincludingredivisionoftasksandreductionofworkinghours.
- It was awarfor the redivision ofcoloniesandspheresofinfluence, he said.
- Womenmovinginto theworkforcewasassociatedwith some redivision ofhouseholdresponsibilities.
- There was anincreaseincommunallandredivisions in the late nineteenthcentury.
- Somestatesbelievedthat afurtherredivision wouldallowthem toincreasetheirpowers.
Separating and dividing
- apheresis
- atomize
- bifurcate
- bifurcation
- bisect
- clove
- dissociate
- dissociateyourselffromsomething
- dissociation
- disunite
- disunity
- fracture
- hive
- parcel
- polarize
- polarized
- polarizer
- prophase
- pull
- unravel