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[ US /dɪsˈjunjən/ ]
NOUN
  1. the termination or destruction of union

How To Use disunion In A Sentence

  • In the Deep South, where the idea of disunion is taken most seriously, three main groups of secessionists can be identified. NYT > Home Page
  • Seward's late speech at Rochester as revolutionary and disunionist. A Political History of the State of New York, Volumes 1-3
  • States as a year wherein all the baleful seeds of disunion were sown, which grew, to ripen, a little more than ten years later, into _disunion_ in fact. Slavery and Four Years of War, Vol. 1-2 A Political History of Slavery in the United States Together With a Narrative of the Campaigns and Battles of the Civil War In Which the Author Took Part: 1861-1865
  • While the caves represent disunion between British and India, the Mosque (the title of the first part of the novel) represents a union.
  • Arguably Ages invents this history of nature which will inform Benjamin's and Adorno's reformulation of "natural history" as history subject to nature: "the self-cognition of the spirit as nature in disunion with itself" (Adorno and Horkheimer 39). 'The Abyss of the Past': Psychoanalysis in Schelling's Ages of the World (1815)
  • On the declaration above quoted Mr. Douglas based many arguments, in vain attempts to prove that Mr. Lincoln was a disunionist. Fifty Years of Public Service
  • Generally speaking, the disunion is complicated with frondescence -- but not always so. Vegetable Teratology An Account of the Principal Deviations from the Usual Construction of Plants
  • So the historic gold and bimetallic standards receive attention, both as union and disunion (breaking-up).
  • That assumes that the euro can survive disunion and dissolution. Times, Sunday Times
  • Why is the king indifferent (today) to that disunion, which is about to take place between persons related so closely? The Mahabharata of Krishna-Dwaipayana Vyasa, Volume 2 Books 4, 5, 6 and 7
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