Pronunciation: /dɪˈvɜrdʒ/
noun the act of diverging or moving in different directions
A1 The paths of the two friends started to diverge as they pursued different career paths.
A2 The opinions of the group members began to diverge as they discussed the best course of action.
B1 The political parties diverge on many key issues, making it difficult to find common ground.
B2 The data from the experiment diverge significantly from the predicted results, raising questions about the methodology.
C1 The artist's style began to diverge from traditional techniques, leading to a new wave of creativity.
C2 The theories presented by the two scientists diverge in their approach, but both offer valuable insights into the phenomenon.
verb to separate and go in different directions
A1 The two roads diverge at the fork, one leading to the mountains and the other to the beach.
A2 As we continued our hike, the paths started to diverge, and we had to choose which way to go.
B1 The opinions of the group began to diverge as different members expressed their own perspectives.
B2 The data from the experiment diverge significantly from the predicted results, indicating a potential error in the methodology.
C1 The political parties diverge on key issues such as healthcare and taxation, making compromise difficult.
C2 The paths of the two characters in the novel diverge and eventually lead to very different outcomes in their lives.
formal The two scientific theories began to diverge as new evidence was discovered.
informal Our opinions on the movie diverge quite a bit, but that's what makes discussions interesting.
slang I can't believe how much our tastes in music diverge - we have nothing in common!
figurative Their paths in life started to diverge, leading them in different directions.
diverged
diverges
more divergent
most divergent
diverge
will diverge
has/have diverged
is/are diverging
divergent
divergent
to diverge
diverging
diverged