diverge
IPA: dɪvˈɝdʒ
verb
- (intransitive, literally, of lines or paths) To run apart; to separate; to tend into different directions.
- (intransitive, figuratively, of interests, opinions, or anything else) To become different; to run apart; to separate; to tend into different directions.
- (intransitive, literally, of a line or path) To separate, to tend into a different direction (from another line or path).
- (intransitive, figuratively, of an interest, opinion, or anything else) To become different, to separate (from another line or path).
- (intransitive, mathematics, of a sequence, series, or function) Not to converge: to have no limit, or no finite limit.
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Examples of "diverge" in Sentences
- Divergent thinking is possible in the matrix.
- From here the water is diverged to the canal.
- After the demise of the Maquis the novels diverge.
- It accounts for the major divergence in the dating.
- Both the curl and the divergence of this field vanish.
- At the rear the tube is divergent and velocity reduces.
- Guayabero is the most divergent language of the family.
- It is the most divergent branch of the Turkic languages.
- As to their signification, opinions are hopelessly divergent.
- I presume that this is the reason for the divergent definitions.
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