To share (something) by dividing it.
To vote, as in the British parliament and other legislatures, by the members separating themselves into two parties (as on opposite sides of the hall or in opposite lobbies), that is, the ayes dividing from the noes.
To separate into two or more parts.
To mark divisions on; to graduate.
To calculate the number (the quotient) by which you must multiply one given number (the divisor) to produce a second given number (the dividend).
To play or sing in a florid style, or with variations.
To disunite in opinion or interest; to make discordant or hostile; to set at variance.
To be a divisor of.
To split or separate (something) into two or more parts.
Of a cell, to reproduce by dividing.
An act of dividing.
A distancing between two people or things.
A large chasm, gorge, or ravine between two areas of land.
The topographical boundary dividing two adjacent catchment basins, such as a ridge or a crest.
A thing that divides.
To collect; normally separate things.
To grow gradually larger by accretion.
To bring stitches closer together.
To collect molten glass on the end of a tool.
To accumulate over time, to amass little by little.
To haul in; to take up.
To infer or conclude; to know from a different source.
To congregate, or assemble.
Especially, to harvest food.
To bring parts of a whole closer.
To gain; to win.
To be filled with pus
To add pleats or folds to a piece of cloth, normally to reduce its width.
To bring together, or nearer together, in masonry, as for example where the width of a fireplace is rapidly diminished to the width of the flue.
The soffit or under surface of the masonry required in gathering. See gather (transitive verb).
A gathering.
The inclination forward of the axle journals to keep the wheels from working outward.
A blob of molten glass collected on the end of a blowpipe.
A plait or fold in cloth, made by drawing a thread through it; a pucker.