schism

noun
/ˈskɪzəm/

Etymology

From Middle English scisme, from Old French cisme or scisme, from Ancient Greek σχίσμα (skhísma, “division”), from σχίζω (skhízō, “I split”). Doublet of schisma. Compare chasm. This word was historically pronounced /ˈsɪzəm/ (and still is among the clergy); the pronunciations /ˈʃɪzəm/, /ˈskɪzəm/ are due to the spelling (the latter may have been reinforced by learned influence); compare schedule.

  1. derived from σχίσμα
  2. derived from cisme
  3. inherited from scisme

Definitions

  1. A split or separation within a group or organization, typically caused by discord.

    • But Harry, in his civilian suit, was also a reminder of the schism between the traditional and the modern in the royal family that can’t be drowned out by pageantry.
  2. A formal division or split within a religious body.

    • The schism between Sunnis and Shias happened quite early in Islamic history.
  3. a split within Christianity whereby a group is no longer in communion with the Church or…

    a split within Christianity whereby a group is no longer in communion with the Church or its ecclesiastical authorities, but shares essentially the same beliefs; in other words, a political split without the introduction of heresy.

  4. + 1 more definition
    1. To split, divide (a group or organization).

      • “This is going to schism Maga terribly online,” Kirk said. “You're going to see—I don't want to say a Maga civil war, but it's going to be a Maga online food fight that is going to be very hard to navigate.”

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for schism. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA