diverse

/ˈdəˈvɝs/

UK: /ˈdaɪ.vɜːs/

diverse

English Adj Top 16,158
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Definition

Consisting of different elements; various.

Etymology

PIE word *dwóh₁ The adjective is derived from Middle English divers, diverse (“different, divergent”), from Anglo-Norman divers, Anglo-Norman divers, and Old French divers (“different; of various kinds”) (modern French divers), and directly from their etymon Latin dīversus (“different, diverse”), an adjective use of the perfect passive participle of dīvertō (“to divert, turn away”), from dī- (variant of dis- (prefix meaning ‘apart, in two’)) + vertō (“to turn”) (ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *wert- (“to rotate; to turn”)). Doublet of divert. The adverb is derived from Middle English diverse (“differently; at various times”), from divers, diverse (adjective) (see above).

Example Sentences

  • "[T]he diverse mone abowt, / Now bryght, now browne, now bent, now full, and now her lyght is owt."
  • "Eloquence is a great and diverse thing."
  • "The stage reflected the increasingly diverse Democratic party in which women and people of color are ascendant. Three women – two more than have ever shared a stage during a presidential primary debate and one of whom is Hindu – a Latino former congressman and a black senator participated."
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