divert
51divert — To cause (air, a liquid, traffic, etc.) to follow a different course. For example, air is diverted to the air cleaner; traffic has been diverted around the accident site …
52divert — v.tr. 1 (often foll. by from, to) a turn aside; deflect. b draw the attention of; distract. 2 (often as diverting adj.) entertain; amuse. Derivatives: divertingly adv. Etymology: ME f. F divertir f. L divertere (as DI (2), vertere turn) …
53divert field — See diversion airfield …
54divert a flight — change the route of an aircraft …
55divert one's attention — turn one s attention away from …
56Fabrice Divert — Pas d image ? Cliquez ici. Biographie Nationalité …
57Fabrice Divert — Football player infobox playername = Fabrice Divert fullname = Fabrice Divert nicknames = height = dateofbirth = birth date and age|1967|9|2 cityofbirth = Caen, Calvados countryofbirth = France dateofdeath = cityofdeath = countryofdeath =… …
58avert, divert — These words are both based upon a Latin term meaning to turn, but they have different meanings and applications in English. Avert means to turn away, to ward off : He quickly averted his eyes. Drive carefully and try to avert an accident. Divert… …
59attempt to divert — index dissuade, expostulate Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …
60call divert — UK US noun [uncountable] a feature of a telephone system that automatically switches calls from one number to another Thesaurus: telephone services and companieshyponym …