Divergence in a sentence as a noun

I suspect that the clear divergence does exist, but may not mean what you think it means...Second: I worked on OS X.

There is some divergence before this period, but not as much as would be expected otherwise.

I could see a divergence, though:High quality, "collectible" books kept for their prestige value.

It's a big divergence from current couch input schemes, and the open nature of it might mean that it'll be improved for ergonomics and whatnot.

The problem isn't socialism, it's a divergence of productivity between the northern and southern regions of the euro area.

A while back I developed a topic similarity scoring system that just counted the number of common traits things have in common, rather than using a dot product or K-L divergence or anything like that.

The difference between wealthier and poorer parts of society, this argument goes, is higher in America, but this is not as harmful because the divergence is just based on what you make of yourself and changes generation to generation, rather than being based on rigid notions of class or heredity like in Europe and persisting across generations.

Divergence definitions

noun

the act of moving away in different direction from a common point; "an angle is formed by the divergence of two straight lines"

See also: divergency

noun

a variation that deviates from the standard or norm; "the deviation from the mean"

See also: deviation departure difference

noun

an infinite series that has no limit

See also: divergency

noun

a difference between conflicting facts or claims or opinions; "a growing divergence of opinion"

See also: discrepancy disagreement variance