partitioning

Definition of partitioningnext
present participle of partition
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Example Sentences

Recent Examples of Synonyms for partitioning
Verb
  • Some look at wide areas of the sky to do surveys, while others pinpoint specific targets; some take images, while others take spectra, dividing the incoming light into different energies (or colors, wavelengths or frequencies, all of which are different terms for essentially the same thing).
    Phil Plait, Scientific American, 15 May 2026
  • This time, the administration is dividing more families by greater distances than before, by expelling parents without their children, en masse.
    Caitlin Dickerson, The Atlantic, 15 May 2026
Verb
  • The membrane will also find applications beyond fuel cells, where it could be used for splitting water, reducing carbon dioxide, and synthesizing ammonia.
    Ameya Paleja, Interesting Engineering, 18 May 2026
  • Rehearsals took four months, with Kubicek splitting his days between the three participating schools.
    Jeff Miller, Rolling Stone, 18 May 2026
Verb
  • For the quintessential Glacier National Park visit, take the Going-to-the-Sun Road for 50 miles of stunning vistas, bisecting the east and west sides of the park.
    Giovanna Caravetta, Travel + Leisure, 4 Feb. 2026
  • Valley Fair, located on Stevens Creek Boulevard, sits both in San Jose and Santa Clara, with the city border bisecting the property.
    Robert Salonga, Mercury News, 1 Dec. 2025
Verb
  • American manufacturers remain deeply dependent on Chinese supply chains despite years of rhetoric about decoupling the two economies.
    Vivian Salama, The Atlantic, 14 May 2026
  • In the 1970s, once President Richard Nixon ended Bretton Woods by decoupling the dollar from gold, that privilege was revived in oil and debt, requiring every country on Earth to accumulate dollars simply to buy oil, and then reinvest those dollars back into American debt.
    Nick Lichtenberg, Fortune, 24 Mar. 2026
Verb
  • The event has been criticized as promoting Christian nationalism and obscuring the lines separating church and state.
    Chandelis Duster, NPR, 17 May 2026
  • The nation’s tradition of separating church and state, however, was not on display.
    Tiffany Stanley, Los Angeles Times, 17 May 2026
Verb
  • Levanon’s reading of the labor data is that the economy is bifurcating in a specific and underreported way.
    Nick Lichtenberg, Fortune, 16 May 2026
  • Defendants misleading sales and advertising practices, along with bifurcating sales and marketing against the operation of the rental Program and debt enforcement, allowed Defendants to offload their supply of aging and stagnant inventory at an unlawful premium.
    Nate Anderson, ArsTechnica, 13 Apr. 2026
Verb
  • Not just beat reporters, mind you, but fan sites, Substacks, podcasts and YouTube channels, all of which spend eight months dissecting every name at every position — a media climate befitting modern college football.
    Stewart Mandel, New York Times, 13 May 2026
  • Teams spent several months scouting, interviewing, dissecting each player’s physical skills and character before the draft.
    ABC News, ABC News, 25 Apr. 2026
Verb
  • Bending down, Yara picked up the first oyster, resolving to find it, if nothing else, a decently sized saltwater tank.
    Literary Hub, Literary Hub, 19 May 2026
  • Nvidia’s GPUs, first developed in 1999 for rendering graphics on computers and gaming consoles, function by breaking complex computing problems into smaller tasks and resolving them simultaneously.
    Matthew Chin, CNBC, 19 May 2026
Examples are automatically compiled from online sources to show current usage. Read More Opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.

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Cite this Entry

“Partitioning.” Merriam-Webster.com Thesaurus, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/partitioning. Accessed 22 May. 2026.

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