How To Use Divert In A Sentence

  • All the essential B vitamins and folic acid from the food are grabbed by the bacteria present in diverticula caused by faecal matter and stagnant food which prevents these vitamins to reach the blood. Natural Remedies for Curing Diverticulosis
  • The efforts of the Emperor Franz Joseph and the ruling elite to divert attention from their country's increasingly threadbare imperial pretensions furnished Musil with comic material galore.
  • Passengers' eyes divert to Lauren and they begin to mutter incoherently about her.
  • They talked occasionally of planting colonies, but were diverted by the war.
  • She felt his hand grazing hers, and looked up at him, but his attention was suddenly diverted.
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  • Although efforts to divert single-use batteries from the waste stream are growing, only a patchwork of regulations currently exists, depending on where you live.
  • What lawns deserve is grey water, that basinful of (cooled) soapy washing-up water, the sluiced out teapot, the diverted bathwater. Times, Sunday Times
  • He thought this was a cheap shot by the chemical industry to divert attention away from pesticides. Times, Sunday Times
  • One stray click and I'm rickrolled, prankishly diverted to the now-familiar footage of Rick Astley being devoured by a pack of London cannibals. Wired Top Stories
  • This medical condition usually requires the surgical placement of a shunt system to divert cerebrospinal fluid to another part of the body.
  • In an attempt to divert the resulting social unrest, Stalinist bureaucrats and communalist demagogues fomented nationalist sentiments while seeking patrons among the major powers.
  • The ETF as envisioned is a great tool for silver investment for those unable or unwilling to buy, carry and store silver but what started as a way to encourage demand is now diverting demand from real silver which would tighten the supply and make us profits. Archive 2008-07-20
  • In short, these kind of hairbreadth missings of happiness look like the insults of Fortune, who may be considered as thus playing tricks with us, and wantonly diverting herself at our expense. The History of Tom Jones, a Foundling
  • The flight was diverted to Gatwick because of a bomb scare.
  • BAT Kenya serves as a hub for 16 African countries most of which are landlocked and import directly from Kenya, which has seen some traders diverting transit goods.
  • We cannot divert from a quest that may hold answers to key secrets about the nature of the universal order to track down a few dozen petty brigands.
  • The train was diverted to Cambridge because of engineering works on the main line.
  • During the monsoon season the villagers divert their occupation to fishing and agriculture.
  • The plan was abandoned, the lot was sold at a profit, and the funds were diverted to another purpose. Christianity Today
  • That would be wrong and divert funds away from essential care. The Sun
  • It should be diverting parents away from contested hearings into the making of parenting plans. Times, Sunday Times
  • That would be wrong and divert funds away from essential care. The Sun
  • Perforation is a rare complication of intestinal carcinoid tumor. Only 11 cases have been reported in the literature and most of them were located at the ileum, appendix, and Meckel's diverticulum.
  • I do not know what I may appear to the world, but to myself I seem to have been only like a boy playing on the sea-shore, and diverting myself in now and then finding a smoother pebble or a prettier shell than ordinary, whilst the great ocean of truth lay all undiscovered before me. Isaac Newton 
  • If the diverticulitis is not severe, treatment will be with painkillers, antibiotics, laxatives and dietary advice.
  • When there is no recreation or business for thee abroad, thou may'st have a company of honest old fellows in their leathern jackets in thy study which will find thee excellent divertisement at home. The Guide to Reading — the Pocket University Volume XXIII
  • A weir is a dam placed across a river to raise or divert the water, or a fence in a stream to catch or retain fish.
  • By definition, foregut fermentors comprise animals with a pregastric fermentation chambers such as the rumen, reticulum, and omasum of ruminants and diverticula or fermentative sacs of other ruminant-like mammals.
  • Hence their scramble to divert domestic rubbish anywhere but landfill. Times, Sunday Times
  • In contrast to Tailleferre's lightweight divertissement of a quartet, Durey's is concentrated, serious and powerful.
  • This is because part of the existing East Rail line will be diverted on to new track that has been sandwiched between the existing live railway and the main pipelines carrying water from China.
  • Patients under 60 years of age with diverticulosis were significantly more likely to have benign, precancerous and advanced cancerous polyps than patients without diverticulosis, the study found. A Possible New Weapon to Battle Brain Tumors
  • It viewed the Marshalls attack merely as an enemy attempt to divert strength from our southern operations.
  • The political contretemps is, however, in danger of diverting attention from the delivery of houses, electricity, water and sanitation to the millions deprived under apartheid.
  • They were diverted from flooded roads twice, then found themselves in a traffic jam caused by a multicar fender bender. WRECKED
  • There was no worn channel for the creek, and its waters, dammed up, diverted, flying through the air on giddy flumes, trickling into sinks and low places, and raised by huge water-wheels, were used and used again a thousand times. LI-WAN, THE FAIR
  • We also divert a low-power sample of the radiation to obtain in-situ metrology.
  • EU members were unusually outspoken in appearances before the U.N. Human Rights Council, saying they were worried about preparations for a global racism conference to be held next month because attention was being diverted from the real problems of racial discrimination. EU countries oppose Muslim views on racism meeting
  • They are generally so refractory, self-conceited, obstinate, so firmly addicted to that religion in which they have been bred and brought up, that no persuasion, no terror, no persecution, can divert them. Anatomy of Melancholy
  • They were diverted to the town hall, where camp beds were set up for them. Times, Sunday Times
  • Floods also caused some rail services to be diverted, and the Environment Agency issued warnings via loudhailers that the River near the Rail Station was running high.
  • At Gusev Crater, Spirit had to divert from her original course up Husband Hill because the slopes were too steep and the sandy terrain too slippery.
  • While the last checks were completed, I reflected on my preflight briefing concerning the unlikely event that I might have to divert.
  • THE passenger whose hoax bomb threat saw a plane diverted under a fighter jet escort leaves court yesterday after owning up. The Sun
  • It has some glimmers of interest, and some diverting visuals, but really nothing makes up for the laborious pace and risibly bad writing.
  • I say, I would suppose that this might divert our doctor from casting his eye upon Vedelius, whose defensative would have informed him that these epistles had been opposed as false and counterfeit before ever Salmasius or The Doctrine of the Saints��� Perseverance Explained and Confirmed
  • By no means should a diplomatic plane with the president be diverted from its route and forced to land in another country. Times, Sunday Times
  • ‘The spooks and their uniformed agencies are both part of a smokescreen to divert attention from the real culprits,’ he said.
  • That's the best weapon we have against these evil people, our flat refusal to allow them to divert us more than momentarily from our daily lives.
  • Whole artillery units had to be diverted to this humdrum task. Nemesis: The Battle for Japan, 194445
  • What lawns deserve is grey water, that basinful of (cooled) soapy washing-up water, the sluiced out teapot, the diverted bathwater. Times, Sunday Times
  • The best trick is to momentarily divert their attention - " Hey!
  • But so it was, as great men and princes are said to call in their flatterers when dinner has been served, so the Athenians, upon slight occasions, entertained and diverted themselves with their spruce speakers and trim orators, but when it came to action, they were sober and considerate enough to single out the austerest and wisest for public employment, however much he might be opposed to their wishes and sentiments. The Lives of the Noble Grecians and Romans
  • But we could easily save money, diverting resources to more innovative management practices.
  • The result was an ambitious target for Essex of 65 per cent of waste diverted from landfill without incineration by 2007.
  • This procedure involves complete excision of the diverticular sac and has been perfected recently by the use of stapling devices.
  • Manchester airport said that the incident led to a series of incoming flights being diverted to other airports and minor delays to outgoing flights. Times, Sunday Times
  • The money and resources expended on ensuring portability of old-fangled phone numbers will be diverted from other projects.
  • And first, I am very sensible how much the gentlemen of wit and pleasure are apt to murmur, and be choked at the sight of so many daggle-tailed parsons that happen to fall in their way, and offend their eyes; but at the same time, these wise reformers do not consider what an advantage and felicity it is for great wits to be always provided with objects of scorn and contempt, in order to exercise and improve their talents, and divert their spleen from falling on each other, or on themselves, especially when all this may be done without the least imaginable danger to their persons. An Argument against Abolishing Christianity
  • Obviously it wasn't my intent to write an encyclopedia entry on the topic, and your nitpick is an attempt to divert things off-topic. Abiogenesis and Evolution
  • This had caused levels in the lodge to fluctuate and water had to be diverted from the stream via a sluice.
  • By recycling these items they are diverted from landfill avoiding the associated environmental problems.
  • He kind of backtracked and said I don't mean to draw a straight line between Hillary Clinton's vote for the war in Iraq and what happened in Pakistan today, but he did make the same argument that Obama has been making about diverting resources away from getting Al Qaeda in Afghanistan because of the war in Iraq and he did not back off of that. CNN Transcript Dec 27, 2007
  • He said:'It is fantastic this money will be diverted from vanity projects to saving lives. The Sun
  • Still, its action scenes make it diverting. Times, Sunday Times
  • But Solomon saith, Prudens advertit ad gressus suos; stultus divertit ad dolos. The Essays
  • The thought of Angie looking rugged and outdoorsy briefly diverted me. A NASTY DOSE OF DEATH
  • This procedure consists of dividing the septum between the cervical esophagus and the diverticular pouch.
  • My fear is that attention will be diverted from issues that really matter to Selby miners, such as securing better pension rights.
  • Surrounding areas across south Manchester soon came to a standstill as diverted traffic clogged the streets.
  • A lot of the money will be swallowed up by the military, or will have been diverted from existing loans.
  • But it has emerged that the government diverted most of the money elsewhere. Times, Sunday Times
  • As wazir, Safdar Jang diverted imperial funds for his own use, so much so that he was accused of impoverishing the Mughal court.
  • It proved that the plane had diverted drastically from its flight plan. Times, Sunday Times
  • Instead of people putting energy into directly working for local and global change, voting diverts and co-opts people power.
  • At full length he diverted a scorcher destined for the top corner over the bar.
  • A traveller is flying from Atlanta GA to Bangor ME, and for some reason the pilot declares an emergency and needs to divert to Newark. The Volokh Conspiracy » Unexpected Flight Delay => Hotel Stay => Criminal Prosecution for Gun Possession
  • A colostomy diverts stool into an appliance attached to the skin, thereby eliminating leakage of stool from the rectum.
  • THE passenger whose hoax bomb threat saw a plane diverted under a fighter jet escort leaves court yesterday after owning up. The Sun
  • There is an episode with everyone in beaky white masks that I didn't quite follow, and a jazz-dance divertissement.
  • Raytheon's next-generation SM-3 Block IB will incorporate a throttleable divert and attitude control system and guidance and sensor upgrades to improve performance while maintaining the reliability of the Block IA. Japan Achieves Third Ballistic Missile Intercept Using Raytheon Standard Missile-3 - Yahoo! Finance
  • It soon became clear to me, that the dialogue about Lebanon and Damascus, which was followed up with a clishmaclaver anent dirks, daggers, red cloaks, and other bloody weapons which made all my flesh grue, had some connexion with Taffy's papers on the table -- out of which James had been diverting himself by reading bits here and there, at random like. The Life of Mansie Wauch tailor in Dalkeith
  • Two diverted airliners were given special clearance to land at Manchester. The Sun
  • Colonoscopy revealed diverticulitis and several benign polyps, which were excised.
  • But at the date of the "Cross Readings" he was mainly what Burke, speaking contemptuously of his status as a plenipotentiary, styled a "_diseur de bons mots_"; and he was for this reason included among those "most distinguished Wits of the Metropolis," who, following Garrick's lead in 1774, diverted themselves at the St. James's Coffee-house by composing the epitaphs on Goldsmith which gave rise to the incomparable gallery entitled _Retaliation_. De Libris: Prose and Verse
  • So, suffice it to say, in one way or another Hamilton's books are sufficiently diverting, which is something I need right now.
  • He said that he thought it was wrong for so much money to be diverted from patient care. Times, Sunday Times
  • This keeps most of the fans diverted while others buy programs, CDs and drinks.
  • Then the prime minister's Tristar jet was buffeted by freak 200-mile-an-hour winds before being diverted from Ottawa to Montreal due to fog.
  • Margaret tried to talk of other things, but was in too much discomfort to exert herself enough to divert his attention. The Daisy Chain
  • Anyway, just as we were leaving the Moor, their attention was diverted just long enough for a lovely couple to come up to me and say, ‘Here, sonny, would you like this goldfish?’
  • Her plane was ordered to divert to an RAF base in Norfolk where an armed escort was provided for her journey to Sandringham. A SONG AT TWILIGHT
  • Diverted enzymes join the ingested food only in the distal small intestine, otherwise known as the ileum Recently Uploaded Slideshows
  • Many passengers are still unaware of the changes and are surprised when these buses divert from their old routes.
  • I do not know what I may appear to the world, but to myself I seem to have been only like a boy playing on the sea-shore, and diverting myself in now and then finding a smoother pebble or a prettier shell than ordinary, whilst the great ocean of truth lay all undiscovered before me. Isaac Newton 
  • Message to Diane: Should I allow my high purposes to be diverted by this literary humoresque, albeit one with an educative dimension? A MEANS TO EVIL
  • There are a lot of vessels at anchor and some are being diverted. Times, Sunday Times
  • He diverted himself momentarily with the calculation of the total impedance of a certain circuit. THE INNOCENT
  • While grief is fresh, every attempt to divert only irritates. You must wait till it be digested, and then amusement will dissipate the remains of it. Samuel Johnson 
  • Cage seems unusually glum about his task, though Ron Perlman does get to headbutt Satan, and there's a tatty rope bridge across a chasm to give this dun-coloured trudge at least one hokily diverting set piece. Telegraph.co.uk - Telegraph online, Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph
  • A diverting entertainment nonetheless, this is one book not to judge by its blocky lime-green cover or its bland layout.
  • Margaret tried to talk of other things, but was in too much discomfort to exert herself enough to divert his attention. The Daisy Chain
  • Both are habits born out of compulsive desires to please and to divert the attention away from themselves. 50 Ways to Become a Self-Confident Woman
  • They use a diverter spout, a supply pipe, and a handheld shower spray. Never Vintage | SciFi, Fantasy & Horror Collectibles
  • By no means should a diplomatic plane with the president be diverted from its route and forced to land in another country. Times, Sunday Times
  • In the first part of the study, patients with diverticular hemorrhage were treated medically, including transfusions as required.
  • This second post also carried with it a position of assistant mistress and Cartwright soon found that she was being diverted from teaching by the administration.
  • The call is diverted, the number unobtainable, the voice at the end of the line is not the person in charge.
  • In its current construct, the NIC is in danger of becoming just a mildly diverting government think tank. Times, Sunday Times
  • To encourage me by diverting my attention, the Arabs chanted their monotonous songs, mainly in their own language, interspersed with expressions about buckshish, "Englese good to Chambers's Edinburgh Journal, No. 459 Volume 18, New Series, October 16, 1852
  • War is further seen as a means of diverting the attention of working people from the intractable social and economic crisis at home.
  • That first Cornucopia, looks like a diverticulated intestine, or the sliced off piece of the brain from someone with alzheimers. Wrecktopia of Cornucopias
  • There is a devil / shaytan / iblis, a creature of God that tries to divert humanity from worshipping the One and Unique God, Creator. Alex Jones' Prison Planet.com
  • The problem here is that several years ago in Cleveland they passed a huge bond issue for school construction and they were going to divert a large part of money, a large part of it, for what they called a warm, safe and dry program. CNN Transcript Oct 11, 2007
  • looking chipper, like a man...diverted by his own wit
  • Too often the film comes across more like a tribute to old-fashioned swashbuckling epics than a solid story in its own right, and the result is diverting enough but lacks dramatic heft.
  • The new charge will penalise companies that artificially divert profits offshore to sidestep the taxman. Times, Sunday Times
  • Neither when I spoke of red, or blue, and green, as well as refrangibility, had I these several colors, or the rays of light passing into a different medium, and there diverted from their course, painted before me in the way of images. On the Sublime and Beautiful
  • He must divert their sympathy for Ray into distrust of him, and before he had fully considered his words they were spoken, -- crafty, insidious, and calumniatory. Marion's Faith.
  • And one thing that they do sometimes -- excuse me, a little bit of throat congestion -- they actually sometimes will divert some of the intestine into a bag -- it's called a colostomy bag -- so that actually the intestine gets a chance to heal, the abdominal cavity gets a chance to heal while that suture line is fixing itself. CNN Transcript Jan 16, 2007
  • Wolchak, a 23 - year-old Coast Guardsman serving as the officer of the day (OOD) at Coast Guard Station New York, immediately called the crews of a 25-foot and a 33-foot response boat just returning from security patrols and diverted them to the scene of the plane crash. Barbara L. Patton: Flight 1549 Responder Honored With Military Leadership Award
  • There are a lot of vessels at anchor and some are being diverted. Times, Sunday Times
  • Money could be diverted into areas where it could be put to better use, such as policing hard core drugs.
  • Allowing workers to divert some of this money into the stock market will not only put their retirement future at risk, it will imperil the federal government's ability to keep its commitment to current retirees.
  • When these become inflamed or infected, the condition is known as diverticulitis. The Sun
  • Paragon looked to see a smooth trail that diverted from the ravine, leading into the passive earthen walls.
  • He began also the Translation of _Heliodorus_ his _Æthiopick_ History, in the same kind of Verse, of which, to give the Reader the better divertisement, we shall present you with a tast. The Lives of the Most Famous English Poets (1687)
  • Needless to say, I wanted to put the book aside, because it is not entertaining or diverting.
  • Prime farm land must be conserved for agriculture and should not be allowed to be diverted to non-farm uses, unless absolutely essential.
  • It can be attached to the downpipe by using a rain diverter kit. via Arbroath Waterbutts | Impact Lab
  • A urethral diverticula is usually identified as a distal bulge under the urethra.
  • We will divert part of our 20 billion a year aid budgets. Times, Sunday Times
  • divert the low voltage to the engine cylinders
  • It can be attached to the downpipe by using a rain diverter kit. via Arbroath Waterbutts | Impact Lab
  • It is endlessly diverting and can keep a simpleton like me amused for near hours on end.
  • She diverted the move and countered with an uppercut that he avoided by tucking his chin in.
  • WASHINGTON — The U.S. military is secretly diverting aerial drones and weaponry from the Afghan battlefront to significantly expand the CIA's campaign against militants in their Pakistani havens. CIA Escalates in Pakistan
  • We are now left to wonder whether the publicly-advertised trials of GM crops were only a smokescreen to divert attention away from the real, clandestine experiments.
  • Curious, the Mistress of Freeport diverted from her course to have a closer look.
  • Soon you will have something new to divert you on a wet Bank Holiday. Times, Sunday Times
  • He said that he thought it was wrong for so much money to be diverted from patient care. Times, Sunday Times
  • Feffer, wishing to divert him, had told him the tale of the insurance adjuster who pulled out the pistol.
  • A diverting entertainment nonetheless, this is one book not to judge by its blocky lime-green cover or its bland layout.
  • Don't I know they're a company of crazies, cranks, and puling adolescents of all ages who major in moral minors in order to divert attention from what in their lives they really should feel guilty about?
  • There were fears of drunken brawls that could divert police from keeping the peace elsewhere. Times, Sunday Times
  • Literally, "Speaking about a vehicle: To slip (skid), diverting itself laterally from the direction it was following. Road sign spanish
  • Removal of wood above a growth bud or shoot diverts energy into that bud or shoot.
  • Whole grains are also associated with lower risks of heart failure, breast cancer, and diverticular disease. The Flex Diet
  • Rail works continuing until Bank Holiday Monday will mean Virgin cross country trains from Birmingham to north-east Scotland will be diverted from Leeds and Wakefield to Doncaster and Sheffield.
  • He then received a pass from Gaul and belted a ball towards an apparently barren goal only to see Christy Kealy appear to divert it out the field.
  • Remove the plumbing fixtures, faucet, handles, shower diverter, drain lever, and water valves.
  • He was accused of diverting some of the firm's money into his own pocket.
  • Besides increasing the risk of cardiovascular disease, a high-fat diet also increases the risk of cancer, obesity, and diverticulitis, which is an inflammation of the colon due to pockets of stagnant digested matter. The Best Alternative Medicine
  • _Impaction of foreign bodies_; _Compression of the gullet from without_; _Spasm of the muscular coat_; _Cardiospasm_; _Paralysis of the gullet_; _Diverticula_ or _pouches of the gullet_; Manual of Surgery Volume Second: Extremities—Head—Neck. Sixth Edition.
  • And diverted a whole crapload of money from social programs to pay for it .. Think Progress » Ron Paul’s Foreign Policy Views Divide Southern Republican Leadership Conference
  • A project in the Himalayas diverts 6 million litres of sewage per day that would otherwise be dumped into the Ganges and uses it to raise fodder crops.
  • The inflammatory infiltrate raised the possibility of an infectious granulomatous disease or a conventional diverticular abscess.
  • Will the struggles against global capitalism go forward on the program of socialist internationalism or will they be diverted into the blind alley of reactionary nationalism?
  • The road was closed for five hours and traffic diverted via Longborough.
  • It is designed to divert water from the upper reaches of the river to the northeast coast.
  • The Chief Minister said he sees a collision course approaching but won't do anything to divert it.
  • And Hewitt has not relented on diverting billions of pounds from NHS trusts to private treatment centres.
  • He need only reach the race and open the sluice gate, and the mill would be defended by swift water, diverted from the river. LIRAEL: DAUGHTER OF THE CLAYR
  • So it must be painfully apparent to a leading man giving his all in a big musical number when the audience has its attention forcibly diverted. Times, Sunday Times
  • If you want to stop your baby doing something, the best way is to quickly distract and divert her onto a different activity.
  • The derailment in Lewisham caused chaos, with hundreds of trains cancelled or diverted. Times, Sunday Times
  • Okay, I'll admit, Norwich entertained me on that little divertissement.
  • As the road bends sharply to the right, pass through the gate on the left signed Public Bridleway Route Diverted.
  • Usually it was very difficult to divert the skipper from any procedure he had decided upon: he was fond of quoting Napoleon's "Order plus counterorder equals disorder. Tin
  • The crowd was greatly diverted with the performance.
  • They risk diverting aid money from those who need it most to those who have no need of it at all. Times, Sunday Times
  • People divert from their normal route to avoid disturbing this not so rare breed!
  • If a man gain the use of wealth, peradventure he is diverted thereby from the remembrance of his Lord; if poverty choke him his heart is distracted by woe, or if disquietude waste his heart, weakness causeth him to fall. The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • The front wheels see most of the power most of the time, but ‘Intelligent Torque Management ‘diverts the engine's efforts rearwards as required when the front wheels lose traction.’
  • They were diverted by frequent derailments and frozen in winter by heating breakdowns. Truman
  • It used this influx of cash to help build up its war-machine, it commandeered aid vehicles for its own purposes and, by diverting aid supplies, helped feed its armies…
  • Traffic was ordered to divert to another road because of the repair of the main road.
  • Lena quickly jumped in with a diverting remark.
  • All east bound traffic was diverted until noon.
  • In order to obviate that, because money is fungible and budget-cutting is suddenly in vogue, you would think that government agencies would be aggressively trimming noncritical, nonlife-threatening expenditures and diverting scarce resources to genuinely pressing needs. Waste And Bad Judgment Sprout At The USDA
  • When you own a 0800 Freephone Telephone number, calls can be diverted to you wherever you are and on whichever telephone network you choose.
  • These pouches are known as diverticula, a name which is derived from the word “diverted”. Natural Remedies for Curing Diverticulosis
  • Sitting in the pub at lunchtime with his nibs, a pint and a good book was far more entertaining and diverting.
  • They're just making time so that people's attention is diverted. Times, Sunday Times
  • Prokofiev fashioned a suite of six pieces resembling a classical divertimento, but one laced with dissonances, evoking Stravinsky's Octet.
  • Small pouches (diverticula) develop in the wall of the large intestine, which can become inflamed or infected (diverticulitis). The Sun
  • After dinner was finished, Audrey retired to the drawing room, where she began reading in a feeble attempt to divert her mind from the day's activities.
  • But it has emerged that the government diverted most of the money elsewhere. Times, Sunday Times
  • The moment it detects wheel slip at the front axle, up to 99% of power can be diverted to the rear wheels. Times, Sunday Times
  • The need would be to show, against reasonable expectation, that the second did not divert attention from the first.
  • Between these circular fibers (the cricopharyngeal muscle) and the oblique fibers of the inferior constrictor muscle there is a weakly supported point through which the esophageal wall may herniate to form the so-called pulsion diverticulum. Bronchoscopy and Esophagoscopy A Manual of Peroral Endoscopy and Laryngeal Surgery
  • Outbound lanes will be closed and drivers diverted to detours for another week.
  • I told the sound guy that I didn't want to be miked up today; this was too important an outing for me and I needed nothing to divert my attention from the job in hand.
  • His soldiers leveled their villages and his engineers diverted and drained the water that gave the marshes life.
  • That huge sums could be diverted to those in genuine need - not least the mentally ill - if the spongers were stopped seems to fall on deaf ears.
  • But this call is diverted, so the bank talks to the fraudster instead. Times, Sunday Times
  • What the terrestrial channels have done is to divert resources to their portfolios of digital channels. Times, Sunday Times
  • The crowd was greatly diverted with the performance.
  • By no means should a diplomatic plane with the president be diverted from its route and forced to land in another country. Times, Sunday Times
  • Her eyes kept on getting diverted to the diamond ring on her finger and she couldn't help but smile.

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