Cleave in a sentence as a verb

My favorite is cleave/cleave one of which means to separate and the other to join together.

Lacking other arguments, these people will cleave to whatever argument of principle they find in front of them.

The mighty pyramids of stone That wedge-like cleave the desert airs, When nearer seen, and better known, Are but gigantic flights of stairs.

" It's just silly.† Just within English we have words like "cleave," that are widely accepted as meaning both "hold on tightly" and "separate.

I believe the Oxford Nanopore approach is to use an enzyme to cleave single nucleotides off of the end of the strand one by one.

There are also many combinator words like `bi` or `cleave` that operate on the quotations that don't have Forth equivalents as far as I know.

See also bass, close, desert, does, dove, have, intimate, invalid, lead, lives, object, present, produce, read, refuse, sow, subject, tear, wound ...Plus, from a different angle, words which mean the opposite of themselves, such as cleave.

I tend to consider the Soviet experiment a subset of the general Progressive one, which sheds no complimentary light on the latter -- but, for those who cleave to it, "no true Scotsman" seems spackle enough to cover the cracks.

At work, that makes things worse, because then you get tagged as "not a team player"It can really really suck, but what you have to do is not let that beat you and make a strong effort to go and find people that you can get along with and cleave closely to them.

We also established a collaboration with researchers at Yale University, who will lend their expertise in generating advanced glycation end-products and lead efforts in developing agents which may be able to cleave glucosepane.

Cleave definitions

verb

separate or cut with a tool, such as a sharp instrument; "cleave the bone"

See also: split rive

verb

make by cutting into; "The water is going to cleave a channel into the rock"

verb

come or be in close contact with; stick or hold together and resist separation; "The dress clings to her body"; "The label stuck to the box"; "The sushi rice grains cohere"

See also: cling adhere stick cohere