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Diviner   Listen
noun
Diviner  n.  
1.
One who professes divination; one who pretends to predict events, or to reveal occult things, by supernatural means. "The diviners have seen a lie, and have told false dreams; they comfort in vain."
2.
A conjecture; a guesser; one who makes out occult things.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Diviner" Quotes from Famous Books



... sea wherein to ride than the stormy fluctuance of mortal passion; Plato is diviner than Ovid," said a puritanic, piping voice from a coif that was fashioned out of the white camellia-blooms behind my chair, and circled the prim ...
— The Atlantic Monthly, Vol. II, No. 8, June 1858 • Various

... and loved it, and gathered its wealth and sweetness and love of living into his being, as visible food whereby to create invisible stature; whose earthly experience has carried him on, as Nature carries growth—unconsciously, powerfully, perfectly, into a diviner life. For ever it must remain with me that I had missed ...
— The Gates Between • Elizabeth Stuart Phelps

... think that we seem to be getting on the right track; for the priest and the diviner are swollen with pride and prerogative, and they create an awful impression of themselves by the magnitude of their enterprises; in Egypt, the king himself is not allowed to reign, unless he have priestly powers, and if he should be of another class ...
— Statesman • Plato

... stamp of divinity upon it, and spiritualizes the thoughts and affections, so as to put a true difference between the true God, and the gods that made not the heavens and the earth. Alas! the worship of many Christians speaks out no diviner or higher object than a creature, it is so cold, so formal and empty, so vain and wandering. There is no more respect testified unto him, than we would give unto some eminent person. You find in the scripture how the strain of the saints' affections and devotion ...
— The Works of the Rev. Hugh Binning • Hugh Binning

... I spend whole hours, delaying: Here Nature shaped, as if in sportive playing, The angel blossom from the bud. Here lay the child, with Life's warm essence The tender bosom filled and fair, And here was wrought, through holier, purer presence, The form diviner ...
— Faust • Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe


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