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  1. Dictionary
    severed
    /ˈsevərd/

    adjective

    • 1. having been cut or sliced off: "severed limbs"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. to break or separate, especially by cutting: The knife severed an artery and he bled to death. Her foot was severed from her leg in a car accident. Electricity cables have been severed by the storm. to end a connection with someone or something: The US severed diplomatic relations with Cuba in 1961.

  3. to break or separate, especially by cutting: The knife severed an artery and he bled to death. Her foot was severed from her leg in a car accident. Electricity cables have been severed by the storm. to end a connection with someone or something: The US severed diplomatic relations with Cuba in 1961.

  4. sever in American English. (ˈsɛvər ) verb transitive, verb intransitive. 1. to separate; make or become distinct; divide. severed from his family by the war. 2. to part or break off, as by cutting or with force; cut in two. to sever a cable, to sever all relationship.

  5. : to put or keep apart : divide. especially : to remove (something, such as a part) by or as if by cutting. intransitive verb. : to become separated. Synonyms. break up. decouple. disassociate. disconnect. disjoint. dissever. dissociate. disunite. divide. divorce. part. ramify. resolve.

  6. Severed definition: separated from the whole or divided into parts, as by cutting or the like. See examples of SEVERED used in a sentence.

  7. verb. /ˈsevə (r)/ /ˈsevər/ (formal) Verb Forms. to cut something into two pieces; to cut something off something. sever something to sever a rope. a severed artery. sever something from something His hand was severed from his arm. Definitions on the go.

  8. Jul 12, 2024 · Definitions of severed. adjective. detached by cutting. “a severed head”. synonyms: cut off. cut. separated into parts or laid open or penetrated with a sharp edge or instrument.

  9. 1. To cut off (a part) from a whole: severed the branch from the tree. 2. To divide into parts; break or interrupt: sever a cord; severed the army's supply lines. 3. To break up (a relationship, for example); dissolve. See Synonyms at separate.

  10. From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English sev‧er /ˈsevə $ -ər/ verb formal 1 [ intransitive, transitive] to cut through something completely, separating it into two parts, or to become cut in this way SYN cut off Martin’s hand was severed in the accident. a severed rope 2 [ transitive] to end a relationship with someone, or a ...

  11. To sever something is to cut it off from the whole. If your girlfriend breaks up with you on your anniversary, you might respond by severing the blossoms off the roses you were planning to give her. (Just an idea.) Sever rhymes with ever, but it looks like the word severe, which means "harsh."