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divvy

[ US /ˈdɪvi/ ]
[ UK /dˈɪvi/ ]
NOUN
  1. short for dividend; especially one paid by a cooperative society

How To Use divvy In A Sentence

  • Johnson was free to divvy up his share of the money as he chose.
  • There were a lot of conversations about auntie or granny snuffing it so the kids could divvy up the profits from a sale.
  • Maybe he brought Ivanko back so they could stash the loot, divvy it up, whatever they were going to do. HOPE TO DIE
  • Maybe he brought Ivanko back so they could stash the loot, divvy it up, whatever they were going to do. HOPE TO DIE
  • Take Scottish shinty and Irish hurling and divvy up a fair compromise to create a composite set of rules incorporating both traditions finer points.
  • You get to say ‘Ah, yes, he may be a bit of a divvy now, but I knew him before he was famous‘.
  • Mom toiled until dawn divvying up her worldly goods, because, ‘you never know.’
  • That was a moment when a defeated Ottoman Empire gave the victorious Europeans the power to divvy up the Middle East and to create new countries both for diasporan Jews and for the Arabs, who had been dominated by the Turks. Bloodlust
  • As more exporters enter the market Australian companies are divvying up the pie into increasingly smaller shares.
  • Should marital misconduct be taken into account when divvying up marital assets?
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