All 50 Uses of
diverge
in
Allegiant
- My ancestor, and this is the inheritance she passed to me: freedom from the factions, and the knowledge that my Divergent identity is more important than I could have known.†
p. 2..5
- I don't owe the people outside this city anything, whether I am Divergent or not.†
p. 7..9
- "Divergent," Tris says to her, pointing at her own head.†
p. 8..2
- In my experience, most Divergent can't resist the truth serum.†
p. 8..4
- She promised me she wouldn't go to her death in the Erudite compound when Jeanine demanded the sacrifice of a Divergent, and then she did it anyway.†
p. 9..2
- That we should send people outside when the city has a large Divergent population?†
p. 20..4
- I relax, and I no longer feel like some kind of Divergent soldier, defying serums and government leaders alike.†
p. 32..4
- "We believe in following the guidance of the city's founders, which has been expressed in two ways: the formation of the factions, and the Divergent mission expressed by Edith Prior, to send people outside the fence to help whoever is out there once we have a large Divergent population.†
p. 61..7
- "We believe in following the guidance of the city's founders, which has been expressed in two ways: the formation of the factions, and the Divergent mission expressed by Edith Prior, to send people outside the fence to help whoever is out there once we have a large Divergent population.†
p. 61..8
- We believe that even if we have not reached that Divergent population size, the situation in our city has become dire enough to send people outside the fence anyway.†
p. 61..8
- He was Divergent.†
p. 86..5
- Amar was the first person who noticed that I was Divergent, and he helped me to hide it.†
p. 86..6
- But he couldn't hide his own Divergence, and that killed him.†
p. 86..7 *
- I may be angry with her for fighting me in Jeanine's laboratory, but she's still Tori, the woman who guarded the secret of my Divergence.†
p. 92..8
- Or, as you currently know them …. the Divergent.†
p. 124..9
- Ever since Tori told me the word for what I am—Divergent—I have wanted to know what it means.†
p. 124..9
- And here is the simplest answer I have received: "Divergent" means that my genes are healed.†
p. 124..9
- I thought that "Divergent" explained everything that I am and everything that I could be.†
p. 125..2
- Finding none, she says, "So when Edith Prior said we were supposed to determine the cause of Divergence and come out and help you, that was …."†
p. 126..3
- " 'Divergent' is the name we decided to give to those who have reached the desired level of genetic healing," says David.†
p. 126..4
- We didn't expect the leader of Erudite to start hunting them down—or for the Abnegation to even tell her what they were—and contrary to what Edith Prior said, we never really intended for you to send a Divergent army out to us.†
p. 126..7
- "So what you're saying is that if we're not Divergent, we're damaged," Caleb says.†
p. 126..8
- And the Divergent are not.†
p. 127..5
- I think of my father, a born Erudite, not Divergent; a man who could not help but be smart. choosing Abnegation, engaging in a lifelong struggle against his own nature, and ultimately fulfilling it.†
p. 127..8
- Just after my mother died, I grabbed hold of my Divergence like it was a hand outstretched to save me.†
p. 134..1
- Divergent,†
p. 134..3
- They faked my death because I was Divergent, and Jeanine had started killing the Divergent.†
p. 140..0
- They faked my death because I was Divergent, and Jeanine had started killing the Divergent.†
p. 140..0
- "The Erudite representative had just begun to kill the Divergent, of course," he says.†
p. 153..8
- Seems he passed on the idea of killing off the Divergent to her, right before his heart attack.†
p. 153..9
- But the Divergent were still being killed when I was an initiate.†
p. 154..3
- Some of the rescued Divergent needed some distance from your experiment—it was too hard for them to watch the people they had once known and loved going about their lives, so they were trained to integrate into life outside the Bureau.†
p. 154..5
- "You, for example, have displayed extraordinary serum resistance—most of the Divergent aren't as capable of resisting serums as you are," Matthew says.†
p. 157..2
- "And Tobias can resist simulations, but he doesn't display some of the characteristics we've come to expect of the Divergent.†
p. 157..4
- "Apparently you display some Divergent characteristics and you don't display others," she says.†
p. 161..7
- Matthew continues, "The only problem with the genetic tracker is that being aware during simulations and resisting serums doesn't necessarily mean that a person is Divergent, it's just a strong correlation.†
p. 171..7
- I'm curious to see if you're actually Divergent, or if your simulation awareness just makes it look like you are."†
p. 171..9
- There's a chance I'm not actually Divergent?†
p. 172..1
- The combination of healed genes and simulation awareness genes is just what I expected to see from a Divergent.†
p. 175..6
- "It means," Matthew says, "that you are not Divergent.†
p. 176..1
- You have, in other words, the appearance of a Divergent without actually being one.†
p. 176..2
- I'm not Divergent.†
p. 176..3
- And this means that the one good thing my father had—his Divergence—didn't reach me.†
p. 176..6
- When I found out I was Divergent, I thought of it as a secret power that no one else possessed, something that made me different, better, stronger.†
p. 179..2
- Now, after comparing my DNA to Tobias's on a computer screen, I realize that "Divergent" doesn't mean as much as I thought it did.†
p. 179..4
- David said the Divergent are dying and someone has to stop it, because that's a waste of our best genetic material.†
p. 205..3
- I think that's a pretty sick way to put it, but David doesn't mean it that way—he just means that if it wasn't the Divergent dying, we wouldn't intervene until a certain level of destruction, but since it's them it has to be taken care of now.†
p. 205..4
- In a way, it feels like we are leaving each other to our grief, his over the loss of his Divergence and whatever hopes he had for Marcus's trial, and mine, finally, over the loss of my parents.†
p. 207..7
- Because he's Divergent.†
p. 216..8
- Marcus was Divergent—genetically pure, just like me.†
p. 217..3
Definition:
-
(diverge) to move apart; or be or become different