To go in a different direction than what is expected.
Sinònims
Examples for "deviate"
Examples for "deviate"
1She said now was not the time to deviate from the plan.
2Should Britain then deviate from them, the EU could retaliate with tariffs.
3But if I may deviate from our ethos for just one second.
4Genotypes deviate from Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium in only a small number of intervals.
5Marapper answered them greasily and unhappily; he was not permitted to deviate.
1Investors' decisions would diverge only because of differences in their personal situation.
2The popular and the national interests must necessarily in some measure diverge.
3Drink, food and shopping habits all diverge between London and the rest.
4They tend to diverge during periods of market stress and vice versa.
5Moreover, numerosity and duration processing diverge in terms of their neuronal correlates.
1Let her go astray because there's too much wrong to cope with?
2Yes, she had the potential to go astray on an epic scale.
3At the old fort; follow the crowd, and you'll not go astray.
4His was not the heart contented to go astray after a tear.
5S: And as to the poets, those who go astray follow them.
1These features make it useful for the measurements of highly aberrated eyes.
2And his sensual resurrection was incredible-anaberrated Dog Star flaming in a physical November, at a spiritual All Hallows.
3He saw them through no aberrating mist of tenderness or expediency-butwith the single directness of the man of action.