How to Use diversion in a Sentence

diversion

noun
  • Sports provide him with a welcome diversion from the pressures of his job.
  • Hiking is one of my favorite diversions.
  • Our town offers few diversions.
  • He created a diversion while his partner stole her pocketbook.
  • The punter acted as if the snap went over his head to add a diversion.
    Ryan Morik, Fox News, 9 Nov. 2024
  • As part of the plea, the youth agreed to enter a diversion program for six to nine months.
    Keith L. Alexander, Washington Post, 30 Oct. 2023
  • Sometimes your brain just gets tired and needs a rest — or at least a diversion.
    Deb Amlen, New York Times, 16 Dec. 2022
  • The court, with the boy’s parents’ consent, placed the teen into a diversion program.
    cleveland, 17 Jan. 2023
  • Most do not attend school, and there are few diversions.
    Anand Gopal, The New Yorker, 11 Mar. 2024
  • Dodge nosy questions about your love life with a clever diversion.
    Jenna Ryu, SELF, 31 July 2024
  • The home game was the kind of diversion the players needed after the past seven days, in which some players saw the flames come close to their homes.
    Janis Carr, Orange County Register, 14 Jan. 2025
  • The crime may disappear into the ether, or the youth may be sent into diversion.
    Armstrong Williams, Baltimore Sun, 3 Aug. 2024
  • There should be a greater focus on diversion and treatment, Biehl said.
    Madeline Buckley, Chicago Tribune, 12 Dec. 2022
  • The teen had been referred to Beats Not Bullets by the city through a diversion program for young people, Beasley said.
    Darcy Costello, Baltimore Sun, 29 July 2024
  • But in the 1960s, the diversion of yet more of the Amu Darya’s flow into the new Karakum Canal precipitated a tipping point.
    Henry Wismayer, Anchorage Daily News, 30 Aug. 2022
  • Cal Fire officials had said there was a spot fire that was about 30 to 40 acres across the diversion pool in the Lakeland Boulevard area.
    Rosalio Ahumada, Sacramento Bee, 3 July 2024
  • Exercise on its own can be linked to GI woes due to jostling and the diversion of blood flow away from the gut (hello, runner’s trots).
    Cindy Kuzma, SELF, 28 Nov. 2023
  • There was diversion of methadone into the black market.
    Carol Sutton Lewis, Scientific American, 20 Apr. 2023
  • Need a diversion from packing up the skeletons, bats and witches hats?
    Andrew Torgan, CNN, 3 Nov. 2024
  • The risk of the diversion of foreign aid in wartorn countries has long bedeviled the U.S. and other countries.
    T. Christian Miller, ProPublica, 20 Mar. 2024
  • Just as Davidson may have been something of a diversion for Kardashian, so too was the pair a balm for our weary souls.
    Michelle Ruiz, Vogue, 8 Aug. 2022
  • Because of that, the launch of VB Body, a new line of jersey separates and dresses, might seem like a diversion.
    Sarah Spellings, Vogue, 27 Apr. 2022
  • Trump will not have the scope, so often exploited in the past, to create diversions from this drama.
    Time, 14 Aug. 2023
  • Who’s flying close to the north pole, which volcanos are causing diversions.
    Ars Staff, Ars Technica, 7 Nov. 2023
  • In the end, his case was denied diversion into mental health court.
    Tribune News Service, Hartford Courant, 14 Jan. 2024
  • If they are taken to jail, should they be charged or referred to diversion programs?
    Eva Wen, Journal Sentinel, 11 Dec. 2024
  • The buses took a long diversion across fields and marshland as the main crossing point over a river had been destroyed.
    Matthew Luxmoore, WSJ, 4 Oct. 2022
  • That’s what can happen when this sort of thing becomes a diversion — the threshold keeps being raised.
    Owen Gleiberman, Variety, 9 Nov. 2022
  • Rivals argues that this isn’t necessarily a bad thing; television, in its universe, exists for the sake of a good diversion.
    Jackson McHenry, Vulture, 20 Dec. 2024
  • That’s in part a response to Jose Ibarra, sentenced in November to life in prison for killing Riley, who avoided a conviction on shoplifting after being sent to a diversion program.
    Rebecca Beitsch, The Hill, 7 Jan. 2025

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'diversion.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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