0
Usenet Posted 22 years ago
Usage

The word "divert" ?

Hi, folks.
"It that SCO filed the suit against linux diverted the attention of the entire IT industries" C-Net said.
I think the sentence means that the suit attracted the attention of the entire IT.
But my dictionary says the word "divert" means to distract or to turn aside from a direction.
Example : diverted the course of a river..
It's confusing me.. the meanings of two words - attract and distract - are opposite ones, aren't they?
Which one should I take??
Thank you.
  

Top answer

[nq:1]"It that SCO filed the suit against linux diverted the attention of the entire IT industries" C-Net said. I think ... a direction..

  • [nq:1]"It that SCO filed the suit against linux diverted the attention of the entire IT industries" C-Net said.
  • I think ...
  • a direction..
  • It's confusing me..
  • [/nq] No, they're just different.
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

6 Answers
0
[nq:1]"It that SCO filed the suit against linux diverted the attention of the entire IT industries" C-Net said. I think ... a direction.. It's confusing me.. the meanings of two words - attract and distract - are opposite ones, aren't they?[/nq]
No, they're just different. The opposite of "attract" is "repel".

The smell of food attracts people (at least if they're hungry).
0
} Hi, folks.
Hi back.
} "It that SCO filed the suit against linux diverted the attention of the } entire IT industries" C-Net said.
} I think the sentence means that the suit attracted the attention of the } entire IT.
In a sense, but that assumes that entire IT industries are sitting around with nothing to do.
} But my dictionary says the word "divert" means to dist
0
[nq:1]"It that SCO filed the suit against linux diverted the attention of the entire IT industries" C-Net said. I think ... the meanings of two words - attract and distract - are opposite ones, aren't they? Which one should I take??[/nq]
These words suggest different images.
Divert the attention of the industries had been flowing in one direction (probably, whatever the article
0
Thank you for your detailed explanation.
Now I think I got it :-)
So, as I understand, the word "divert" doesn't give any information about its direction like attract or repel, but it
only conveys that it changes its course. Is this right understanding? If I say, according to your example, "The smell diverted me." I guess it may means either of both "The smell attacted me" and "The sme
0
[nq:1]If I say, according to your example, "The smell diverted me." I guess it may means either of both "The smell attacted me" and "The smell repelled me".[/nq]
Not quite. There is another meaning to "divert":
Main Entry: di?vert
Pronunciation: d&-'v&rt, dI-
Function: verb
Etymology: Middle English, from Middle French & Latin; Middle French divertir, from Latin divertere to tu
0
[nq:2]"It that SCO filed the suit against linux diverted the ... are opposite ones, aren't they? Which one should I take??[/nq]
[nq:1]These words suggest different images. Divert the attention of the industries had been flowing in one direction (probably, whatever the article had just been talking about), and this caused it to flow in another direction.[/nq]
'Divert' to me sugge

Related Questions