[
UK
/daɪvˈɜːs/
]
[ US /daɪˈvɝs, dɪˈvɝs/ ]
[ US /daɪˈvɝs, dɪˈvɝs/ ]
ADJECTIVE
-
many and different
a person of diverse talents
tourist offices of divers nationalities -
distinctly dissimilar or unlike
celebrities as diverse as Bob Hope and Bob Dylan
animals as various as the jaguar and the cavy and the sloth
How To Use diverse In A Sentence
- The diverse problems of succession and authority which face the brothers, the audience, and the poet reflect upon one other throughout, and this self-awareness renders nugatory the traditional criticism of Statius as derivative.
- The kings of the heartogram didn't fail to impress, with a diverse crowd gathered, including everyone from young punks to soccer moms and even a haggard old bat dancing around in lingerie.
- The stakeholders are frighteningly numerous, diverse, intensely self-interested, and powerful.
- The chorus of disapproval is as diverse as the new law is excluding. Times, Sunday Times
- The childfree are a diverse group of people, much like the reasons behind the choice not to procreate; however, childfree people tend to be less conventional, more highly educated, and professional. BlogHer - Comments
- This focus seems to contradict the book's goal of including Madagascar's diverse peoples without privileging any single group.
- Educators have also applied paper folding to such diverse mathematical objects as logical structures, axiomatic systems, and tessellations with geometrical figures.
- This wonderful diverse stretch of woodland clings tenaciously to the almost precipitous sides of the gorge.
- San Martin, with whom Guevara is compared by some, led his racially and culturally diverse army with much greater sensibility.
- Frenchmen, on craniology, which is exceedingly interesting, but full of difficulty, and giving very diverse indications. Travels in West Africa