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  1. Learn more:
    to divide or separate from end to end or into layers: to split a log in two. to separate by cutting, chopping, etc., usually lengthwise: to split a piece from a block. to tear or break apart; rend or burst: The wind split the sail.
    www.dictionary.com/browse/split

    A group of extremists split (off) from the Labour Party to form a new "Workers Party ". If you split the difference, you agree on a number or amount that is exactly in the middle of the difference between two other numbers or amounts. Opinions were split cleanly between men and women.

    dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/split
    To divide (something) from end to end, into layers, or along the grain: split the log down the middle. See Synonyms at tear 1.
  2. People also ask
    "Splitted" is incorrect, while "Split," meaning to divide or sever something into parts, is correct. How to spell Split? Remember “Banana Split” to associate with dividing something into parts. Use common phrases like “split decision” to remember the right spelling. Recollect "split second" denoting an extremely brief moment.
    A simple Google search of "be split" and "be splitted" seems to return many more result for the "split" form (nearly a hundred times more). Maybe the "splitted" form is only used in specific contexts or countries? The past tense, and past participle of "split" is "split". I don't think that "splitted" is grammatical, though I dare say it gets used.
    “Splitted” shouldn’t be used! The split past tense form remains “split.” We can only use “splitted” in slang, jargon, or perhaps speech lines from music pieces or characters in stories. Also, the split participle form remains split. Present: Every evening, I split wood with my young brother. Past: Last week, I split wood with my young brother.
  3. Dictionary

    split
    [split]
    verb
    split (verb) · splits (third person present) · split (past tense) · split (past participle) · splitting (present participle)
    1. break or cause to break forcibly into parts, especially into halves or along the grain:
      "the ice cracked and heaved and split" · "split and toast the muffins"
    2. (with reference to a group of people) divide into two or more groups:
      "let's split up and find the other two" · "once again the family was split up"
    3. informal
      (of one's head) suffer great pain from a headache:
      "my head is splitting"
      Opposite:
    4. BRITISH ENGLISH
      informal
      betray the secrets of or inform on someone:
      "I told him I wouldn't split on him"
      Similar:
      inform on/against
      tell tales on
      stab in the back
    5. informal
      leave a place, especially suddenly:
      "“Let's split,” Harvey said"
      Opposite:
    noun
    split (noun) · splits (plural noun) · a split (noun) · the splits (plural noun)
    1. a tear, crack, or fissure in something, especially down the middle or along the grain:
      "light squeezed through a small split in the curtain"
    2. (a splitthe splits)
      (in gymnastics and dance) an act of leaping in the air or sitting down with the legs straight and at right angles to the upright body, one in front and the other behind, or one at each side:
      "I could never do a split before"
    3. a thing that is divided or split.
      • a bun, roll, or cake that is split or cut in half.
      • a split osier used in basketwork.
      • each strip of steel or cane that makes up the reed in a loom.
      • half a bottle or glass of champagne or other liquor.
      • a single thickness of split hide.
      • (in bowling) a formation of standing pins after the first ball in which there is a gap between two pins or groups of pins, making a spare unlikely.
      • NORTH AMERICAN ENGLISH
        a drawn game or series.
      • US ENGLISH
        a split-level house.
    4. the time it takes to complete a recognized part of a race, or the point in the race where such a time is measured.
    Origin
    late 16th century (originally in the sense ‘break up a ship’, describing the force of a storm or rock): from Middle Dutch splitten, of unknown ultimate origin.
    Split
    [split]
    definition
    1. a seaport on the coast of southern Croatia; population 177,500 (est. 2009). It contains the ruins of the palace of the emperor Diocletian, built in about AD 300.
    Translate split to
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