divisive
/dɪˈvaɪsɪv/ (bre, ipa) · /dɪˈvaɪsɪv/ (ame, ipa) · /də-ˈvī-siv also -ˈvi- or -ziv/ (ame, mw)
divisive — 形容詞
- divisivepositive
- more divisivecomparative
- most divisivesuperlative
1. describes a person, topic, or action that makes people hold such strong opposing
造成分裂
使人強烈對立、分成敵對陣營
describes a person, topic, or action that makes people hold such strong opposing views that they separate into rival groups
The proposal to close the local hospital proved highly divisive among residents.
關閉當地醫院的提案在居民中引起高度分歧。
divisive among residents
Immigration remains one of the most divisive issues in modern politics.
移民問題仍是現代政治中最具分裂性的議題之一。
divisive issues
Amina found her uncle's divisive comments about the election deeply upsetting.
Amina 覺得叔叔關於選舉的分歧性言論令她非常難過。
Coach Okafor's divisive coaching style split the team into two opposing camps.
Okafor 教練分裂球隊的執教風格使隊伍分成兩個對立陣營。
- polarizing
stronger implication of pulling people to extreme opposite positions
- contentious
focuses on the heated, argumentative nature of the disagreement
- controversial
broader in scope; may simply attract public debate without necessarily splitting groups
- unifying
bringing people together rather than apart
- harmonious
free from conflict or disagreement
文法句型
divisive + noun
be + divisive
用法筆記
Commonly used with nouns like issue, topic, figure, comment, debate. The word implies more than simple disagreement — it suggests a sharp split that makes cooperation difficult.