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Example sentences for "segregate"

Lexicographically close words:
segmented; segmenting; segments; segne; segno; segregated; segregating; segregation; seguida; seguir
  1. It is interesting to realize, then, the attempt of the medieval period to segregate the disease.

  2. The magistrate has no legal powers to supervise juvenile offenders, nor when their actions show grave depravity, to segregate and cure them to prevent their developing into criminals.

  3. Most shippers, however, will not find it necessary to segregate sales to this extent.

  4. This will segregate cash transactions, just as sales and purchases are segregated, and render much easier an audit of the books.

  5. Who can consistently object to the proposition to segregate the Echeneididæ as a suborder of teleocephalous fishes?

  6. Short of use made of them, they tend to segregate into a peculiar world of their own.

  7. The need of such general points of view is the greater because of a tendency to segregate educational values due to the isolation from one another of the various pursuits of life.

  8. But this state of affairs does not afford instructors an excuse for folding their hands and persisting in methods which segregate school knowledge.

  9. He was one of those interesting characters whose activities are so near the line between great deeds and charlatanism that it is sometimes difficult to segregate the pose from the performance.

  10. A feeling of persecution, opposition, and possible punishment were all potent to segregate the Mormon Church from the rest of humanity and to assure its coherence.

  11. For instance, do the alternative characters of two races of men, when they are related by marriage, segregate in inheritance in accordance with Mendelian principles?

  12. The two types not only segregate from each other in the course of transmission, but they do so in practically exact Mendelian proportions.

  13. Their plan was to reduce the colored race to a race of hewers of wood and drawers of water, to disfranchise the Negro, run him out of Congress and lucrative political jobs in the south, to jim-crow him and segregate him.

  14. France where it had never existed before and attempted to jim-crow and segregate the very colored soldiers who were fighting to save France and to make the world safe for democracy.

  15. In considering in detail the population of the delta (see map 6, area 13), it is convenient to segregate groups according to tribal distinctions rather than strictly according to geographical points.

  16. In the consideration of the 1852 population it was not advantageous to segregate river sectors as has been done for the earlier data.

  17. As a whole the Western Mono constitute a racial and ecological unit and as such it is probably preferable to consider them as a single population entity than to segregate them by rivers, as has been done for the Miwok and the Yokuts.

  18. Personal tastes and convenience, vocational and economic interests, infallibly tend to segregate and thus to classify the populations of great cities.

  19. Practically it might be well to segregate such persons during the reproductive period for one generation.

  20. Each floor had one large room seating 252 children; the primary schoolroom could be divided into two rooms by folding doors, so as to segregate the infant class.

  21. Of course it was impossible for so vast a nation permanently to segregate itself.

  22. As one combat commander put it, "Mix 'um up and you get a strong line all the way; segregate 'um and you have a point of weakness in your line.

  23. Despite General Edwards's comments at the commanders' conference in April, the provision for allowing commanders to segregate barracks "if considered necessary" was removed even before the plan was first forwarded to the Secretary of Defense.

  24. The Navy, Knox told President Roosevelt, would continue to segregate Negroes and restrict their service to certain occupations.

  25. Why was it expedient in a system dedicated to consideration of the individual, asked the president of Howard University, to segregate a Negro of superior mentality?

  26. Men given to retirement and abstract study are notoriously liable to contract a certain degree of childlikeness: and if this be the case when we segregate a man, how much more when we segregate a child!

  27. There is such a thing as mania, which has always been segregated; there is such a thing as idiotcy, which has always been segregated; but feeble-mindedness is a new phrase under which you might segregate anybody.

  28. It is cold anarchy to say that any doctor may seize and segregate anyone he likes.

  29. I would not segregate them, because I respect a man's free-will and his front-door and his right to be tried by his peers.

  30. Segregate yourself from your pseudo-equine quadruped,' says he, 'and come inside.

  31. Yet the children often are apt to segregate into pituitary dominants or pituitary deficients.

  32. You should also contrive stalls separated from the others in which you may segregate the ewes about to yean, as well as any which may be ailing.

  33. It was this "shadow of a sickness," that served to segregate Margaret to the extent that was really necessary for her well being.

  34. It does not fall wholly into the class of blending inheritance, for it does segregate to a considerable extent, yet some of the factors may show blending.

  35. Heredity offers a satisfactory explanation, for some forms of feeble-mindedness and epilepsy, and some of the diseases known as insanity, behave as recessives and segregate in just the way mentioned.

  36. Like all professions, it suffers from the inborn tendency of human nature to segregate itself behind an exaggerated class consciousness.

  37. On a road of more than one or two tracks, it may be advisable to segregate your signals from your track.

  38. Let A and B be two intergenerating groups in which segregate fecundity is first beginning.

  39. Homogamy, on the other hand, answers to discriminate isolation, or segregate breeding: only individuals belonging to the same variety or kind are allowed to propagate.

  40. Segregate Breeding, or homogamy, which arises under any of the many forms of discriminate isolation, must always tend to be cumulative.


  41. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "segregate" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.
    Other words:
    alien; alienate; analyze; apart; bolt; change; cordon; cull; delete; demarcate; depart; detached; differentiate; disconnect; disconnected; discrete; discriminate; disengage; disjoin; disjoint; disjunct; dissociate; distinguish; disunite; diversify; divide; divorce; eject; exotic; expel; extraneous; foreign; gin; incommensurable; incomparable; independent; individualize; insular; insulate; island; isolate; isolated; leave; mark; modify; other; outlandish; part; particularize; quarantine; removed; riddle; screen; seclude; segregate; select; separate; separated; sequester; sever; shut; sieve; sift; single; sort; specialize; split; strange; subdivide; subtract; thrash; thresh; unaffiliated; unallied; unassociated; unconnected; uncouple; unrelated; vary; winnow; withdraw