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diversify
[dih-vur-suh-fahy, dahy-]
verb (used with object)
to make diverse, as in form or character; give variety or diversity to; variegate.
to invest in different types of (securities, industries, etc.).
to produce different types of (manufactured products, crops, etc.).
verb (used without object)
to invest in different types of industries, securities, etc.
to add different types of manufactured products, crops, etc., especially to a business.
diversify
/ 岹ɪˈɜːɪˌڲɪ /
verb
(tr) to create different forms of; variegate; vary
(of an enterprise) to vary (products, operations, etc) in order to spread risk, expand, etc
to distribute (investments) among several securities in order to spread risk
Other 51Թ Forms
- diversifiable adjective
- diversifiability noun
- diversifier noun
- overdiversify verb
- undiversifying noun
- 徱ˈˌھ adjective
- 徱ˌˌھˈٲ noun
- 徱ˈˌھ noun
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of diversify1
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of diversify1
Example Sentences
Along with AI, investors also financed startups and established businesses in healthcare, e-commerce and defense technology, underscoring how investment in the L.A. market has diversified in recent years beyond ad tech businesses and video apps.
Instead, it reveals Hegseth’s Achilles heel, one he shares with Trump: a fundamental insecurity about their place in a country that diversified long ago.
Hu told The Times that universities will “need to diversify the sources of funding: state support, federal funding for research, for students, industry support, foundation support, all of those are important.”
Research for the UK government found a quarter of farms, 26%, earned more than half their income from diversified enterprises.
The committee also said the Welsh government will need to support farmers and rural communities to "diversify their income" away from livestock farming and towards woodland creation and peatland restoration.
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