partition vs unison

partition

noun
  • That which divides or separates; that by which different things, or distinct parts of the same thing, are separated; boundary; dividing line or space. 

  • A vertical structure that divides a room. 

  • An approach to division in which one asks what the size of each part is, rather than (as in quotition) how many parts there are. 

  • A musical score. 

  • An action which divides a thing into parts, or separates one thing from another. 

  • A part of something that has been divided. 

  • A part divided off by walls; an apartment; a compartment. 

  • The severance of common or undivided interests, particularly in real estate. It may be effected by consent of parties, or by compulsion of law. 

  • The division of a territory into two or more autonomous ones. 

  • A division of a database or one of its constituting elements such as tables into separate independent parts. 

  • A section of a hard disk separately formatted. 

  • A collection of non-empty, disjoint subsets of a set whose union is the set itself (i.e. all elements of the set are contained in exactly one of the subsets). 

verb
  • To divide something into parts, sections or shares. 

  • To divide a region or country into two or more territories with separate political status. 

  • To separate or divide a room by a partition (ex. a wall), often use with off. 

unison

noun
  • The state of being in harmony or agreement; harmonious agreement or togetherness, synchronisation. 

  • A sound or note having the same pitch as another, especially when used as the base note for an interval; a unison string. 

  • Identical pitch between two notes or sounds; the simultaneous playing of notes of identical pitch (or separated by one or more octaves). 

  • Two or more voices speaking the same words together. 

How often have the words partition and unison occurred in a corpus of books? (source: Google Ngram Viewer )