0 present participle of desegregate
1 to end segregation (= separation) between races or sexes in an organization:
President Truman desegregated the American armed forces in 1948.
Plans to desegregate the schools/universities met with opposition.
This impulse towards desegregating the functions of recitatives and lyric numbers is reinforced by the less obviously formalised disposition of information both across entire lyric numbers and within individual movements.
They decided to prepare for school desegregation by desegregating the community bit by bit.
One was his acknowledged large role in desegregating the military.
Socioeconomic factors generally do not keep from desegregating communities.