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[ UK /da‍ɪvˈɜːs/ ]
[ US /daɪˈvɝs, dɪˈvɝs/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. many and different
    a person of diverse talents
    tourist offices of divers nationalities
  2. 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
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