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Using "bifurcate"

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ansky  #384929  Wed, 27 Jun 07 02:50 PM

I've always thought of this word in relation to an object -- something that is forked or split.  Recently I've heard it used to describe the segregation of responsibilities in someone's job.  For example... The project management role will shared by two people, with responsibilities bifurcated into business and technical tasks.

I suppose this is acceptable, but it doesn't really sound right...  Thoughts?

Thanks!

  
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Feebs11  #384944  Wed, 27 Jun 07 03:09 PM
I thnk it is fine - "bifurcate" =  divide into two branches or forks. The job is split/divided into two branches: business tasks and technical tasks.
  
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Grammar Geek  #385004  Wed, 27 Jun 07 04:10 PM
Also with a trial. The finding of guilty or not guilty in the first part, and then deciding the punishment if found guilty in another part.
  
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