Thesaurus.com
Dictionary.com
Showing results for bifurcate. Search instead for bifurcates .
Definitions

bifurcate

[bahy-fer-keyt, bahy-fur-keyt, bahy-fer-kit, bahy-fur-] / ˈbaɪ fərˌkeɪt, baɪˈfɜr keɪt, ˈbaɪ fər kɪt, baɪˈfɜr- /


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

“Our second quarter results reflect a bifurcated market. We are winning work and demand is strong for our leading cyber, AI, and warfighting technologies,” said CEO Horacio Rozanski in a news release.

From Barron's

Still, he added the market is bifurcated, and that new full-year outlook reflects the current environment.

From The Wall Street Journal

“What we find interesting is that the market is bifurcated between companies growing quickly and mature companies growing slowly,” he said.

From MarketWatch

"When you peel back the layers of the onion, it's clear that we have a very bifurcated consumer," he said.

From BBC

For all the movie’s crisp attention to bifurcated lives, “The History of Sound” more aptly resembles a painstakingly dry still life than a moving picture.

From Los Angeles Times