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Definition of divine verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

divine

verb
 
/dɪˈvaɪn/
 
/dɪˈvaɪn/
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they divine
 
/dɪˈvaɪn/
 
/dɪˈvaɪn/
he / she / it divines
 
/dɪˈvaɪnz/
 
/dɪˈvaɪnz/
past simple divined
 
/dɪˈvaɪnd/
 
/dɪˈvaɪnd/
past participle divined
 
/dɪˈvaɪnd/
 
/dɪˈvaɪnd/
-ing form divining
 
/dɪˈvaɪnɪŋ/
 
/dɪˈvaɪnɪŋ/
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  1. [transitive] divine what, whether, etc… | divine something (formal) to find out something by guessing
    • She could divine what he was thinking just by looking at him.
    • They had quickly divined that he was a fraud.
    Topics Doubt, guessing and certaintyc2
  2. [transitive, intransitive] divine (something) to search for underground water using a stick in the shape of a Y, called a divining rod
  3. Word Originverb late Middle English: from Old French deviner ‘predict’, from Latin divinare, from divinus, from divus ‘godlike’ (related to deus ‘god’).
See divine in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary
influence
verb
 
 
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