SEPARATIVE - meaning and definition. What is SEPARATIVE
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What (who) is SEPARATIVE - definition

GRAMMATICAL CASE
Ablative; Ablative form; Abl.; Ablativus; Separative case; Adelative case
  • Introduction to the ablative case from a 1903 Latin textbook

Separative      
·adj Causing, or being to cause, separation.
Separative work units         
Separative Work Unit; Separative work unit; Separative Work Units
Separative work – the amount of separation done by an enrichment process – is a function of the concentrations of the feedstock, the enriched output, and the depleted tailings; and is expressed in units which are so calculated as to be proportional to the total input (energy / machine operation time) and to the mass processed. Separative work is not energy.
separable         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Separable; Seperable; Separability (disambiguation)
If things are separable, they can be separated from each other.
Character is not separable from physical form but is governed by it.
ADJ: usu v-link ADJ, oft ADJ from n

Wikipedia

Ablative case

In grammar, the ablative case (pronounced ; sometimes abbreviated abl) is a grammatical case for nouns, pronouns, and adjectives in the grammars of various languages; it is sometimes used to express motion away from something, among other uses. The word "ablative" derives from the Latin ablatus, the (irregular) perfect, passive participle of auferre "to carry away".

The ablative case is found in several language families, such as Indo-European (e.g., Sanskrit, Latin, Albanian, Armenian), Turkic (e.g., Turkish, Turkmen, Azerbaijani, Uzbek, Kazakh, Kyrgyz, Tatar), Tungusic (e.g., Manchu, Evenki), and Uralic (e.g., Hungarian). There is no ablative case in modern Germanic languages such as German and English. There was an ablative case in the early stages of Ancient Greek, but it quickly fell into disuse by the classical period.

Examples of use of SEPARATIVE
1. Russia also signed an agreement to set up another gas centrifuge enrichment facility with an annual capacity of 500,000 separative work units, or SWU, a Tenex spokesman said.
2. Finally, and, perhaps, most ominously, the Russians who supply about half the "separative work units" that comprise USEC‘s enrichment service are increasingly annoyed that USEC refuses to adjust its purchase price to reflect current market prices for SWUs.
3. Serge Brammertz, the UN chief investigator into al–Hariri‘s death, said his team had found "potential linkages" between the cases regarding the "methods" and "intent". "[The cases] were not commissioned and executed by 14 disparate and unconnected persons or groups with an equal number of separative motives," he said.