disunity
/dɪsˈjuːnəti/ (bre, ipa) · /dɪsˈjuːnəti/ (ame, ipa) · /(ˌ)dis-ˈyü-nə-tē dish-/ (ame, mw)
disunity — 名詞
1. a state in which the members of a group hold such different opinions or goals th
分歧;分裂
群體意見不合以致無法合作的狀態
a state in which the members of a group hold such different opinions or goals that they cannot agree on what to do or work together successfully
The environmental group was torn apart by internal disunity over whether to accept corporate donations.
這個環保團體因內部對於是否接受企業捐款產生分歧而分崩離析。
disunity over [topic] — source of conflict within a group
Years of disunity among the board members prevented Sakamoto Corporation from launching its new software.
董事會成員之間長年的分歧,導致坂本公司無法推出新軟體。
years of disunity among [group] + prevented [outcome]
Coach Williams warned the soccer team that disunity would cost them the championship.
威廉斯教練警告足球隊,內部分裂會讓他們失去冠軍。
Disunity within the hospital's nursing staff led to confusion about patient care routines.
醫院護理人員之間的不和,導致病人照護流程出現混亂。
Fatima's research project suffered from disunity between the two lab teams, causing months of delay.
法蒂瑪的研究計畫因兩個實驗室團隊之間的分歧而受到影響,延誤了數個月。
- division
more concrete — suggests the group has actually split into opposing sides; disunity may only mean a failure to co-operate
- discord
more formal and emotional — emphasises open conflict and hostility rather than mere lack of agreement
- dissension
formal — highlights active, voiced disagreement rather than a passive state of disunity
- fragmentation
implies the group has broken into many small, competing parts rather than just being unable to agree
文法句型
disunity + among/within/between [group]
disunity + over [topic]
[group] + torn apart by + disunity
用法筆記
Disunity is uncountable — do not use 'a' or 'one' before it. It describes the condition of a group, never of a single person. Common prepositions that follow it are 'among' (many members), 'within' (inside one body), 'between' (two sides), and 'over' (the subject of disagreement).