fragment

துண்டு
definition
verb
his followers fragmented into sects
break or cause to break into fragments.
noun
small fragments of pottery, glass, and tiles
a small part broken or separated off something.
translation of 'fragment'
noun
முறிந்த துண்டு
example
Remember: what you see here is a tiny 'fragment' of people's lives, the portion they choose to share, and it's often very different to the full picture.
The arguments of both are based on the 'fragment' of an ancient text, preserved by accident in a remote province.
Then you notice, down at the bottom and off to the side, a 'fragment' of a temporary wooden fence, broken and collapsing.
There, I just shared a 'fragment' of my unfortunate life in front of strangers.
Every fact is valuable, like a 'fragment' of pottery to an archaeologist.
I think they are likely to lead to conflicts between 'fragments' and fractions within ruling corporate elites.
Regarding the long term scheme, she warned of the danger of 'fragmenting' the site which could be ‘a disadvantage to any overall vision’.
I noted how its curved edges were constructed from broken 'fragments' of tiles.
Diagrams of spheres and collaged textural elements are part of a surface crowded with 'fragments' .
Rather than 'fragmenting' the book, however, these somewhat chronological chapters are passages, giving definition for and direction to the migration.
I'd given them the pieces, the 'fragments' of knowledge, and they'd put them together to build that.
Most of the costumes are 'fragments' rather then complete outfits.
Other issues included a lack of tendering and contract law and 'fragmented' control of projects.
What impression can voters have of a party that is 'fragmenting' and apparently collapsing?
These images help your dentist to see if there are any broken roots under the gum, or 'fragments' of tooth stuck in your lip or tongue.
It was composed of remnants, 'fragments' , collages, woven together delicately with words.
In an age where media is 'fragmenting' , becoming more specialised, a station with as broad a remit and geographic reach as Radio Scotland increasingly looks like an anachronism.
The fossiliferous ledge overlies a thin, resistant, phosphatic sandstone containing 'fragmental' orbiculoid brachiopods and fish teeth, typical components of the Meade Peak Member of the Phosphoria Formation.
The Museum contains a collection of over 2000 meteorite 'fragments' found all over the world.
He added more coins to the handkerchief and started a separate pile containing of 'fragments' of the jug.
Back in Texas's room, she and Katie were trying to piece together the 'fragments' of the night before.
It was there that rescue workers combed the debris with rakes, painstakingly searching for the tiniest 'fragments' of human remains.
The surface is covered everywhere with a thin 'fragmental' layer (known as soil, or ‘regolith’) that consists mainly of ground-up and remelted lunar rocks, with an average grain size of less than 0.1 millimeters.
Perhaps it's best that we only remember 'fragments' ; the full story would be too much to live with every day.
In support of the inside explosion theory the insurers rely in particular on the fact that no large 'fragments' of plating were found in the engine room.
In a society that seems to be 'fragmenting' even as we watch, the kind of community spirit you find in clubs like this is priceless.
What this beast of crime is doing to us is further 'fragmenting' the fabric of our society.
He just kept shivering and muttering incoherent 'fragments' of distorted English.
Charles' great empire collapsed steadily, 'fragmenting' into dozens of pieces.
Roads are a major force in 'fragmenting' the habitats of plants and animals.
Credits: Google Translate