Idioms for part
Origin of part
before 1000; (noun) Middle English (< Old French < L), Old English < Latin
part- (stem of
pars) piece, portion; (v.) Middle English
parten < Old French
partir < Latin
partīre, derivative of
pars
SYNONYMS FOR part
1
component,
ingredient,
division,
sector.
Part,
piece,
portion,
segment,
section,
fraction,
fragment refer to something that is less than the whole.
Part is the general word:
part of a house. A
piece suggests a part which is itself a complete unit or it may mean an irregular fragment:
a piece of pie; a piece of a broken vase. A
portion is a part allotted or assigned to a person, purpose, etc.:
a portion of food. A
segment is often a part into which something separates naturally:
a segment of an orange.
Section suggests a relatively substantial, clearly separate part that fits closely with other parts to form a whole:
a section of a fishing rod, a book.
Fraction suggests a less substantial but still clearly delimited part, often separate from other parts:
a fraction of his former income.
Fragment suggests a broken, inconsequential, incomplete part, with irregular or imprecise outlines or boundaries:
a fragment of broken pottery, of information.
6 apportionment, lot.
13 responsibility.
18 sever, sunder, dissociate, disconnect, disjoin, detach.
OTHER WORDS FROM part
mul·ti·part, adjective sub·part, nounWords nearby part
British Dictionary definitions for part and parcel
part
/ (pɑːt) /
noun
verb
adverb
to some extent; partly
See also
parts
Word Origin for part
C13: via Old French from Latin
partīre to divide, from
pars a part
Medical definitions for part and parcel
part
[ pärt ]
n.
A portion, division, piece, or segment of a whole.
Any of several equal portions or fractions that can constitute a whole or into which a whole can be divided.
An organ, member, or other division of an organism.
An anatomical part; pars.
parts
The external genitalia.
Idioms and Phrases with part and parcel (1 of 2)
part and parcel
An essential or basic element, as in Traveling is part and parcel of Zach's job. Used since the 15th century as a legal term, with part meaning “a portion” and parcel “something integral with a whole,” this idiom began to be used more loosely from about 1800. Although both nouns have the same basic meaning, the redundancy lends emphasis.
Idioms and Phrases with part and parcel (2 of 2)
part