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Diverting   /daɪvˈərtɪŋ/  /dɪvˈərtɪŋ/   Listen
verb
Divert  v. t.  (past & past part. diverted; pres. part. diverting)  
1.
To turn aside; to turn off from any course or intended application; to deflect; as, to divert a river from its channel; to divert commerce from its usual course. "That crude apple that diverted Eve."
2.
To turn away from any occupation, business, or study; to cause to have lively and agreeable sensations; to amuse; to entertain; as, children are diverted with sports; men are diverted with works of wit and humor. "We are amused by a tale, diverted by a comedy."
Synonyms: To please; gratify; amuse; entertain; exhilarate; delight; recreate. See Amuse.



Divert  v. i.  To turn aside; to digress. (Obs.) "I diverted to see one of the prince's palaces."



adjective
Diverting  adj.  Amusing; entertaining.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Diverting" Quotes from Famous Books



... as fast as he could, taking the nearest way, and the little girl went by the longest, diverting herself in gathering nuts, running after butterflies, and making nosegays of such little flowers as she met with. The Wolf was not long before he got to the old woman's house. He knocked at ...
— The Junior Classics, Volume 1 • Willam Patten

... predirected by our good greatgrandfather, Alexander Robertson already named, who was nothing if not Scotch and Presbyterian and authoritative, as his brave old portrait by the elder Jarves attests, had "sat" before her marriage; the marriage so lamentedly diverting her indeed from this tradition that, to mark the rueful rupture, it had invoked, one evening, with the aid of India muslin and a wondrous gold headband, in the maternal, the Washington Square "parlours," but the ...
— A Small Boy and Others • Henry James

... grass, beyond the folds of Julie's dress. I looked at her, she raised her face as if by the same impulse which had made me raise mine; and gazing at me without saying a word, she burst into tears. "Why do you weep?" I asked with anxious emotion, but in a low tone for fear of disturbing or diverting the course of her silent thoughts. "From happiness," she answered. Her lips smiled, while big tears rolled down her cheeks in shining drops, like the dew of spring. "Yes, from happiness," she resumed. "This day, this hour, this sky, this ...
— Raphael - Pages Of The Book Of Life At Twenty • Alphonse de Lamartine

... jerk always led to another, so one blow was usually the prelude to a thrashing. Johnnie saw that he must stop the thing right there; must have instant help in diverting Barber. Taking a quick, deep breath, he sounded his call for ...
— The Rich Little Poor Boy • Eleanor Gates

... delight," whispered Miss Lowe to Miss Barton, "and it's evidently a subject of the utmost satisfaction to his mother, so I won't make carping criticisms, but take it as a moral for the necessity of due humility over one's own productions. Perhaps mine would be as diverting to an Academician as his ...
— The Madcap of the School • Angela Brazil


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