WordReference Random House Learner's Dictionary of American English © 2025
bi•fur•cate /v., adj. ˈbaɪfərˌkeɪt, baɪˈfɜrkeɪt; adj. also -kɪt/USA pronunciation  
v., -cat•ed, -cat•ing, adj. 
v.
adj.
WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2025v.
- to fork into two branches: [no object]The road bifurcates up ahead.[~ + object]If you bifurcate your computer program at this point, you'll have two choices, each of which should lead you to the desired result.
 
adj.
- divided into two branches.
 
bi•fur•cate 
(v., adj. bī′fər kāt′, bī fûr′kāt;adj. also bī′fər kit, bī fûr′-),USA pronunciation v., -cat•ed, -cat•ing, adj. 
v.t., v.i.
adj.
 bi•fur•cate•ly 
(bī′fər kāt′lē; bī fûr′kāt lē, -kit-),USA pronunciation adv.  
 bi′fur•ca′tion, n. 
            v.t., v.i.
- to divide or fork into two branches.
 
adj.
- divided into two branches.
 
- Medieval Latin bifurcātus, past participle of bifurcāre (bi- bi-1 + furc(a) fork + -ātus -ate1)
 - 1605–15
 
'bifurcation' also found in these entries (note: many are not synonyms or translations):