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Divine

Divine is a word used as an adjective, a verb, and a noun with several related senses. As an adjective, it means of or relating to a god or gods, sacred, holy, or of godlike quality. In everyday English it can also describe something exceptionally delightful or beautiful. As a verb, to divine means to discover or perceive something by insight or supernatural means; in older usage, to foretell or predict by occult methods.

Etymology traces the adjective to Latin divinus, meaning “of a god,” from divus “god,” via Old French

In religious contexts, the Divine with a capital D often denotes God or a supreme being, or

Related terms include divinity, deity, divination, and sacred. The distinction between the everyday sense of “divine”

divin
and
Middle
English.
The
verb
form
comes
from
Old
French
deviner
“to
divine,”
from
Latin
divinare
“to
foretell,”
and
is
historically
related
to
the
same
root
though
it
traveled
through
different
linguistic
paths.
The
two
senses—divine
as
sacred
and
divine
as
foreknowledge—are
linked
by
a
shared
connotation
of
supernatural
or
transcendent
knowledge.
refers
to
sacred
revelation
or
the
divine
will.
The
term
is
used
in
theology
to
discuss
divine
attributes,
divine
law,
and
divine
action
in
the
world.
In
literature
and
broader
culture,
it
appears
in
titles
such
as
Dante’s
Divine
Comedy
and
is
used
as
an
epithet
for
persons
or
works
regarded
as
extraordinarily
excellent.
(wonderful)
and
the
theological
sense
centers
on
reference
to
the
divine
or
to
supernatural
knowledge.