Search:deviate -> DEVIATE
deviate
d e v i a t e hex:#100;#101;#118;#105;#97;#116;#101;
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- Deviate - v. i. - To go out of the way; to turn aside from a course or a method; to stray or go astray; to err; to digress; to diverge; to vary.
- Deviate - v. t. - To cause to deviate.
- Deviated - imp. & p. p. - of Deviate
- Lapse - v. i. - To slide or slip in moral conduct; to fail in duty; to fall from virtue; to deviate from rectitude; to commit a fault by inadvertence or mistake.
- Yaw - v. i. & t. - To steer wild, or out of the line of her course; to deviate from her course, as when struck by a heavy sea; -- said of a ship.
- Bevel - v. i. - To deviate or incline from an angle of 90¡, as a surface; to slant.
- Err - v. i. - To deviate from the true course; to miss the thing aimed at.
- Bow - v. t. - To cause to deviate from straightness; to bend; to inflect; to make crooked or curved.
- Miss - v. i. - To fail to hit; to fly wide; to deviate from the true direction.
- Hade - v. i. - To deviate from the vertical; -- said of a vein, fault, or lode.
- Sheer - v. i. - To decline or deviate from the line of the proper course; to turn aside; to swerve; as, a ship sheers from her course; a horse sheers at a bicycle.
- Depart - v. i. - To forsake; to abandon; to desist or deviate (from); not to adhere to; -- with from; as, we can not depart from our rules; to depart from a title or defense in legal pleading.
- Refract - n. - To break the natural course of, as rays of light orr heat, when passing from one transparent medium to another of different density; to cause to deviate from a direct course by an action distinct from reflection; as, a dense medium refrcts the rays of light as they pass into it from a rare medium.
- Incline - v. t. - To cause to deviate from a line, position, or direction; to give a leaning, bend, or slope to; as, incline the column or post to the east; incline your head to the right.
- Diverge - v. i. - To extend from a common point in different directions; to tend from one point and recede from each other; to tend to spread apart; to turn aside or deviate (as from a given direction); -- opposed to converge; as, rays of light diverge as they proceed from the sun.
- Err - v. i. - To deviate morally from the right way; to go astray, in a figurative sense; to do wrong; to sin.
- Deflect - v. i. - To turn aside; to deviate from a right or a horizontal line, or from a proper position, course or direction; to swerve.
- Oblique - v. i. - To deviate from a perpendicular line; to move in an oblique direction.
- Squint - v. i. - To deviate from a true line; to run obliquely.
- Incline - v. i. - To deviate from a line, direction, or course, toward an object; to lean; to tend; as, converging lines incline toward each other; a road inclines to the north or south.
- Wry - v. i. - To deviate from the right way; to go away or astray; to turn side; to swerve.
strongscsv:description
- G795 ἀστοχέω - 795 ἀστοχέω - ἈΣΤΟΧΈΩ - - astochéō - as-tokh-eh'-o - from a compound of Α (as a negative particle) and (an aim); to miss the mark, i.e. (figuratively) deviate from truth:--err, swerve. - Verb - greek
- G1578 ἐκκλίνω - 1578 ἐκκλίνω - ἘΚΚΛΊΝΩ - - ekklínō - ek-klee'-no - from ἐκ and κλίνω; to deviate, i.e. (absolutely) to shun (literally or figuratively), or (relatively) to decline (from piety):--avoid, eschew, go out of the way. - Verb - greek
- H7847 שָׂטָה - 7847 שָׂטָה - שָׂטָה - - sâṭâh - saw-taw' - a primitive root; to deviate from duty; decline, go aside, turn. - Verb - heb