DIVINE
/dəˈvīn/
adjective
adjective: divine comparative adjective: diviner superlative adjective: divinest
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of, from, or like God or a god.: "heroes with divine powers" "paintings of shipwrecks being prevented by divine intervention".
synonyms: godly, godlike, angelic, seraphic, saintly, beatific, spiritual, heavenly, celestial, holy, empyrean, deiform, deific
antonyms: mortal
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excellent; delightful.: "he had the most divine smile" "that succulent clementine tasted divine".
synonyms: lovely, handsome, beautiful, good-looking, prepossessing, charming, delightful, appealing, engaging, winsome, ravishing, gorgeous, bewitching, beguiling, wonderful, glorious, marvelous, excellent, superlative, perfect, delicious, mouthwatering, delectable, bonny, heavenly, sublime, dreamy, sensational, knockout, stunning, super, great, tasty, fanciable, easy on the eye, a sight for sore eyes, as nice as pie, brilliant, brill, smashing, cute, beaut, beauteous, taking, comely, fair, sightly
antonyms: mundane, dreadful
noun
noun: divine plural noun: divines noun: Divine noun: the Divine
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a cleric or theologian.
synonyms: theologian, clergyman, member of the clergy, churchman, churchwoman, cleric, ecclesiastic, man of the cloth, man of God, holy man, holy woman, preacher, priest, kirkman, reverend, Holy Joe, sky pilot, josser
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providence or God.
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verb
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verb: divine 3rd person present: divines past tense: divined past participle: divined gerund or present participle: divining
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discover (something) by guesswork or intuition.: "his brother usually divined his ulterior motives" "they had divined that he was a fake".
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synonyms: guess, surmise, conjecture, suspect, suppose, assume, presume, deduce, infer, work out, theorize, hypothesize, discern, intuit, perceive, recognize, see, realize, appreciate, understand, grasp, apprehend, comprehend, figure, figure out, latch onto, cotton onto, catch onto, tumble to, get, get the picture, twig, suss, savvy, cognize