Disjoin in a sentence as a verb

This corresponds to a disjoin union in math.

I agree that I'd be far more likely to use these if they were named "conjoin" and "disjoin".

The algebra is built on the primitives conjoin, disjoin, project and rename.

I wrote both of these functions and conjoin and disjoin were definitely considered but were ultimately dismissed to avoid confusion with `conj` and `disj`.

I haven't had much success with that, probably because it's difficult for me to disjoin emotion from passionate evangelism.

The obvious thing to say is "climate"But I guess that would be seen as 'inflammatory' -when in fact it goes to exactly the same disjoin between statistics, and experiental sense.

I just think it's wrong that it's always portrayed as delivering facts, when it must be closer to hastily jotting down a lot of disjoint words, phrases, and half-quotes, and then trying to reconstruct a plausible-sounding story from it later.

For a mathematician, the problem would be much more interesting if it began "consider a train of infinite length in n dimensions", laid out requirements for spacing of m different amenities contained in disjoint cars, and ended with theorems about optimal construction of minimum-sized tiles.

For the religious idea that a certain book or tradition might connect you up with a supremely powerful or supremely lovable non-human person, the literary intellectual substitutes the Bloomian thought that the more books you read, the more ways of being human you have considered, the more human you become..."Even at the one point where he does explicitly seem to say there is no redemptive truth..."To give up the idea that there is an intrinsic nature of reality to be discovered either by the priests, or the philosophers, or the scientists, is to disjoin the need for redemption from the search for universal agreement.

Disjoin definitions

verb

make disjoint, separated, or disconnected; undo the joining of

See also: disjoint

verb

become separated, disconnected or disjoint

See also: disjoint