lexicow

convergevsdiverge

Converge means to come together from different directions toward a single point. Diverge means the opposite: to move apart from a shared point. Same road, opposite traffic.

converge

Six roads set out from six far edges and end, one by one, at the same small dot in the middle.

/kənˈvɜːrdʒ//kənˈvɜːdʒ/·verb
vs
diverge

One road reaches a fork and splits; the two halves lean apart until they've forgotten they were ever one.

/daɪˈvɜːrdʒ//daɪˈvɜːdʒ/·verb

Both words are about paths and a single point. The only thing that changes is which way the traffic runs. Converge points inward, toward the meeting; diverge points outward, away from it. The prefixes give it away: con- means together, as in convene; di- means apart, as in divide.

What each means

converge

To converge is to arrive at the same place from different starting points. Crowds converge on a stadium; rivers converge below a valley; in mathematics a series converges on a limit, and in biology unrelated species converge on the same design — wings, again and again. The word's quiet power is what it implies about the destination: when independent paths keep arriving at one point, the point starts to look less like coincidence and more like truth.

diverge

To diverge is to part ways — two things that once ran together bend apart and keep going. Roads diverge, opinions diverge, species diverge from a common ancestor. From the Latin dis- 'apart' + vergere 'to bend', and the word's quiet warning is that the angle hardly matters at the start: two lines a degree apart are practically touching at the fork. Give them distance, and the gap becomes a gulf. Divergence is rarely a leap — it is a small difference, compounded by time.

At a glance

convergediverge
Meaningcome together toward one pointmove apart from one point
Directioninward, towardoutward, away
Prefixcon– (together)di– (apart)
Often withrivers, crowds, opinions, a maths seriesroads, opinions, species, paths
Nounconvergencedivergence
ExampleThe two rivers converge below the valley.After the dam, the channels diverge.

How to remember the difference

con– pulls things together, the way you convene a meeting or a convoy travels as one. di– splits them, the way you divide a bill or a road forks in two. So run the scene like a film: converge plays it forward to the meeting point, diverge plays it backward, everything leaving. If you can find the dot in the middle, you only have one question left — is the traffic arriving, or leaving?

Examples

converge

  • Tens of thousands of fans converged on the square after the final.
  • Three separate proofs converge on the same conclusion.
  • As evidence built up, the experts' opinions slowly converged.

diverge

  • The trail diverges at the old oak; take the left fork.
  • Their views on the budget began to diverge halfway through.
  • From a common ancestor, the two species diverged over millions of years.

They are opposites, so they almost never swap cleanly. 'Opinions converge' means agreement is forming; 'opinions diverge' means it is coming apart.

FAQ

What is the difference between converge and diverge?
Converge is to come together from different directions toward one point. Diverge is to move apart from one point. Opposite directions, same geometry.
Are converge and diverge opposites?
Yes, they are antonyms. Convergence and divergence describe the two directions of the same movement.
Can you say opinions converge or diverge?
Both. Converging opinions are moving toward agreement; diverging opinions are drifting apart.
What are the noun forms?
Convergence and divergence.
Which prepositions do they take?
Usually converge on a point and diverge from a path.
Is converge a maths term?
Yes. A sequence or series converges when it settles on a limit and diverges when it does not.
converge — full entrydiverge — full entryAll comparisons