devise \dih-VYZE\ verb 1a : to form in the
mind by new combinations or applications of ideas or principles : invent
b : to plan to obtain or bring about : plot
2: to give (real estate) by will
EXAMPLES The author's childhood home was devised to
the city and the Historical Commission will turn it into a museum devoted to
her life.
"Students at the Ilead Charter School devised three ways to bash pumpkins into pieces. One method used rubber surgical tubing to create an Angry Birds-style slingshot to propel the squash through the air. A more direct device crushed the pumpkins with a weight and a bowling ball." — Kevin Lillard,Juneau County Star-Times (Wisconsin), October 15, 2014
"Students at the Ilead Charter School devised three ways to bash pumpkins into pieces. One method used rubber surgical tubing to create an Angry Birds-style slingshot to propel the squash through the air. A more direct device crushed the pumpkins with a weight and a bowling ball." — Kevin Lillard,Juneau County Star-Times (Wisconsin), October 15, 2014
DID YOU KNOW? There's something inventive about devise,
a word that stems from Latin dividere, meaning "to
divide." By the time deviseappeared in English in the 1200s,
its Anglo-French forebeardeviser had accumulated an array of
senses, including "to divide," "distribute,"
"arrange," "array," "digest," "order,"
"plan," "invent," "contrive," and "assign by
will." English adopted most of these and added some new senses over the
course of time: "to imagine," "guess," "pretend,"
and "describe." In modern use, we've disposed of a lot of the old
meanings, but we kept the one that applies to wills. Devise traditionally
referred to the transfer of real property (land), and bequeath to personal
property; these days, however, devise is often recognized as
applying generally to all the property in a person's estate.
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