Example Sentences

Examples are automatically compiled from online sources to show current usage. Read More Opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.
Recent Examples of diviner The diviner then asks a question in a yes-or-no format while tapping the enclosure to encourage the spider or crab to emerge. Michelle Aroney and David Zeitlyn, Smithsonian Magazine, 2 Jan. 2025 There is, however, one more surprise: Most of the text on Lintel 25 is written backward and was probably designed to be viewed with a mirror by ancient Maya conjurers, diviners or oracles. James L. Fitzsimmons, The Conversation, 1 May 2024 Often enough, this meant putting the same sorts of people—women making money as healers or diviners, or colonized people whose local belief systems were frightening to the colonizers—on trial. Rivka Galchen, The New Yorker, 15 Jan. 2024 The diviner confirms the man’s fears: two women have bewitched his wife. Rivka Galchen, The New Yorker, 15 Jan. 2024 See All Example Sentences for diviner
Recent Examples of Synonyms for diviner
Noun
  • For all her outward support, his wife has clearly begun to have her doubts about her beloved prophet.
    Bilge Ebiri, Vulture, 21 Aug. 2025
  • The main point of contention seemed to be identifying Timothy Leary as a poet (seven minutes) or a prophet (half an hour).
    Dennis McNally, Rolling Stone, 7 Aug. 2025
Noun
  • The irony was that Harlem’s numbers queen, a model of rational risk-taking, found herself in a love triangle with a dream-book mystic—then took to the newspapers to denounce Futtam’s obvious impostures.
    Adam Gopnik, New Yorker, 4 Aug. 2025
  • Gamblers are mystics at heart, and lottery players see all sorts of patterns in the supposedly random sequences of winning numbers.
    Rachel Monroe, New Yorker, 19 June 2025
Noun
  • And this desire for control, for some method to be brought to bear on the sinister uncertainty of life, explains also my susceptibility to oracles like the Yijing.
    Michael Robbins, Harpers Magazine, 20 Aug. 2025
  • They are marketed by the media as oracles of economic truth.
    George Calhoun, Forbes.com, 30 July 2025
Noun
  • Sherman has been the sibyl of such proliferating confusions, toying with representation’s integrity and the boundaries of identity for more than four decades.
    Nancy Princenthal, New York Times, 24 Jan. 2024
  • In the left panel, van Eyck depicts separate moments in a narrative that leads our eyes in a snaking line from the foreground figures of Mary and John the Evangelist, past Mary Magdalene and a prophesying sibyl, then up to the soldiers and horsemen crowding around the cross.
    Sebastian Smee, Washington Post, 14 Oct. 2020
Noun
  • But the prevalence of the debate proves the manga’s tight grip on the popular imagination – amplified by both soothsayers across Asia and social media – especially in seismically active Japan, where the constant threat of an earthquake or tsunami looms large in the popular imagination.
    Jessie Yeung, CNN Money, 3 Aug. 2025
  • Online soothsayers like Jon Prosser and Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman have long predicted the content of upcoming Apple announcements, citing anonymous sources from within the company to glean glimpses of what’s next.
    Boone Ashworth, Wired News, 18 July 2025
Noun
  • Then again, not even the famed French astrologer and reputed seer of the 16th Century was all that, based on skepticism.
    Miami Herald, Miami Herald, 6 Aug. 2025
  • The seer was Wernher von Braun, a German engineer and an inspiration for Stanley Kubrick’s Dr. Strangelove.
    Franklin Foer, The Atlantic, 28 July 2025

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Cite this Entry

“Diviner.” Merriam-Webster.com Thesaurus, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/diviner. Accessed 29 Aug. 2025.

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