diremption means A ripping apart; a forceful sundering. Lexicurio rates it Sui generis — a strength score of 87 out of 100.
Why “diremption” is a great word
DIREMPTION — [Noun] A forceful act of tearing or splitting something apart; a violent separation. From the Latin diremptiō ("a separation"), from dirimō ("to separate") + -iō ("abstract noun suffix"). First attested in English 1615–25. Unlike "division," which suggests an orderly partition, or "cleavage," which implies a natural split along a line of weakness, diremption is a rupture that mars the whole beyond repair. It is the jagged fissure in a porcelain plate struck against stone, the final, shouted sentence that sunders a family, or the frayed cable snapping under load—a testament that some separations are not transitions, but wounds.
noun
- A ripping apart; a forceful sundering.