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.
Six roads set out from six far edges and end, one by one, at the same small dot in the middle.
/kənˈvɜːrdʒ//kənˈvɜːdʒ/·verbOne road reaches a fork and splits; the two halves lean apart until they've forgotten they were ever one.
/daɪˈvɜːrdʒ//daɪˈvɜːdʒ/·verbBoth 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
| converge | diverge | |
|---|---|---|
| Meaning | come together toward one point | move apart from one point |
| Direction | inward, toward | outward, away |
| Prefix | con– (together) | di– (apart) |
| Often with | rivers, crowds, opinions, a maths series | roads, opinions, species, paths |
| Noun | convergence | divergence |
| Example | The 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.