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divine
[dih-vahyn]
adjective
of or relating to a god, especially the Supreme Being.
addressed, appropriated, or devoted to God or a god; religious; sacred.
divine worship.
proceeding from God or a god.
divine laws;
divine guidance.
godlike; characteristic of or befitting a deity.
divine magnanimity.
the divine kingdom.
extremely good; unusually lovely.
He has the most divine tenor voice.
being a god; being God.
Zeus, Hera, and other divine beings in Greek mythology.
of superhuman or surpassing excellence.
Beauty is divine.
Obsolete., of or relating to divinity or theology.
noun
a theologian; scholar in religion.
a priest or member of the clergy.
the Divine,
God.
(sometimes lowercase), the spiritual aspect of humans; the group of attributes and qualities of humankind regarded as godly or godlike.
verb (used with object)
to discover or declare (something obscure or in the future) by divination; prophesy.
to discover (water, metal, etc.) by means of a divining rod.
to perceive by intuition or insight; conjecture.
She divined personal details about her customers based on their clothing and accents.
It was not difficult to divine his true intent.
Synonyms: understand, discernArchaic., to portend.
verb (used without object)
to use or practice divination; prophesy.
to have perception by intuition or insight; conjecture.
Synonyms: understand, discern
divine
/ dɪˈvaɪn /
adjective
of, relating to, or characterizing God or a deity
godlike
of, relating to, or associated with religion or worship
the divine liturgy
of supreme excellence or worth
informal, splendid; perfect
noun
(often capital) another term for God
a priest, esp one learned in theology
verb
to perceive or understand (something) by intuition or insight
to conjecture (something); guess
to discern (a hidden or future reality) as though by supernatural power
(tr) to search for (underground supplies of water, metal, etc) using a divining rod
Other Word Forms
- divinable adjective
- divinely adverb
- divineness noun
- half-divine adjective
- half-divinely adverb
- predivinable adjective
- pseudodivine adjective
- subdivine adjective
- subdivinely adverb
- subdivineness noun
- superdivine adjective
- undivinable adjective
- undivined adjective
- undivining adjective
- diviner noun
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of divine1
Example Sentences
"This station recalls the divine woman who awakened the world through her purity and by nurturing a great prophet," said Tehran Mayor Alireza Zakani on X.
“I can’t believe I’m thinking this,” he recalls reflecting, “but it’s the only plausible explanation”—“it” meaning the divine origin of everything.
“We see both Christianity and Judaism. I love Hebrew. It’s a gorgeous language and there are divine secrets in those words.”
The roots of his grudging acceptance of what I and millions of others consider to be one of cuisine’s most divine unions of dairy and pasta is highly regional in its basis.
Courts and legislatures have struggled to divine what this means.
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