cleavage

[klee-vij] /ˈkli vɪdʒ/
noun
1.
the act of cleaving or splitting.
2.
the state of being cleft.
3.
the area between a woman's breasts, especially when revealed by a low-cut neckline.
4.
a critical division in opinion, beliefs, interests, etc., as leading to opposition between two groups:
a growing cleavage between the Conservative and Liberal wings of the party.
5.
the tendency of crystals, certain minerals, rocks, etc., to break in preferred directions so as to yield more or less smooth surfaces (cleavage planes)
6.
Embryology. the total or partial division of the egg into smaller cells or blastomeres.
7.
Also called scission. Chemistry. the breaking down of a molecule or compound into simpler structures.
Origin
1810-20; cleave2 + -age
Examples from the web for cleavage
  • And for some of us, a little cleavage makes the intellectual evaluation that much less burdensome.
  • Now they show generous cleavage and an occasional full-lipped kiss.
  • Because so many beauty pageants, in the end, do come down to cleavage.
  • Hum, you should look more into crystal behavior and cleavage plans.
  • It's spent two years knocking around inches from my perineal cleavage.
  • It's not a matter of cleavage in fashion but cleavage in the voting population.
  • There is a cleavage between people and governments.
  • Here it is all about super tight clothes and lots of cleavage.
  • The bare midriffs, pronounced cleavage and immaculate makeup.
  • And in the scenes where wires aren't sprouting out of his torso, his well-oiled pectoral cleavage ripples impressively.
British Dictionary definitions for cleavage

cleavage

/ˈkliːvɪdʒ/
noun
1.
(informal) the separation between a woman's breasts, esp as revealed by a low-cut dress
2.
a division or split
3.
(of crystals) the act of splitting or the tendency to split along definite planes so as to yield smooth surfaces
4.
(embryol) Also called segmentation. (in animals) the repeated division of a fertilized ovum into a solid ball of cells (a morula), which later becomes hollow (a blastula)
5.
the breaking of a chemical bond in a molecule to give smaller molecules or radicals
6.
(geology) the natural splitting of certain rocks, or minerals such as slates, or micas along the planes of weakness
Word Origin and History for cleavage
n.

1816, in geology, "action of splitting (rocks or gems) along natural fissures," from cleave (v.1) + -age. General meaning "action or state of cleaving or being cleft" is from 1867.

The sense of "cleft between a woman's breasts in low-cut clothing" is first recorded 1946, defined in a "Time" magazine article [Aug. 5] as the "Johnston Office trade term for the shadowed depression dividing an actress' bosom into two distinct sections;" traditionally first used in this sense by U.S. publicist Joseph I. Breen (1888-1965), head of the Production Code Administration (replaced 1945 by Eric Johnston), enforcers of Hollywood self-censorship, in reference to Jane Russell's costumes and poses in "The Outlaw."

cleavage in Medicine

cleavage cleav·age (klē'vĭj)
n.

  1. A series of cell divisions in the ovum immediately following fertilization. Also called segmentation.

  2. The splitting of a complex molecule into two or more simpler molecules. Also called scission.

  3. The linear clefts in the skin, indicating the general direction of the fibers in the dermis.

cleavage in Science
cleavage
  (klē'vĭj)   
  1. Geology The breaking of certain minerals along specific planes, making smooth surfaces. These surfaces are parallel to the faces of the molecular crystals that make up the minerals. A mineral that exhibits cleavage breaks into smooth pieces with the same pattern of parallel surfaces regardless of how many times it is broken. Some minerals, like quartz, do not have a cleavage and break into uneven pieces with rough surfaces.

    1. Biology The series of mitotic cell divisions by which a single fertilized egg cell becomes a many-celled blastula. Each division produces cells half the size of the parent cell.

    2. Any of the single cell divisions in such a series.


cleavage in Culture

cleavage definition


The process by which an animal cell divides into two daughter cells after mitosis. In an embryo, this process is repeated many times and leads to the formation of the blastula.