How to Use convergent in a Sentence

convergent

adjective
  • In fact, Armstrong was one of the officers the city hired to help fill the employment gap over the convergent scandals.
    Nate Gartrell, The Mercury News, 20 Jan. 2024
  • These are problems not solved in one day, and require convergent research.
    Ryan Anderson, Arkansas Online, 2 Sep. 2023
  • Yet the trends of U.S. and Russian behavior are divergent, not convergent—with Russia on the negative side of the divide.
    Thomas Carothers, Foreign Affairs, 12 Mar. 2018
  • And there is no question that changes of norms in Western countries since the beginning of the pandemic have given rise to a form of life plainly convergent with the Chinese model.
    Justin E. H. Smith, Harper's Magazine, 11 May 2022
  • This will be a familiar sight to anyone who lived through the 2010s, when the convergent forces of indie sleaze, twee and prepster aesthetics encouraged women to purchase fire engine-red tights.
    Daniel Rodgers, Vogue, 15 Dec. 2023
  • The period leading up to April 1894, when Edison licensed the first Kinetoscope parlor, was a free-for-all of competing and convergent technologies.
    Nat Segnit, Harper's Magazine, 4 Mar. 2022
  • This study demonstrates convergent evolution, Thomas says, as these creatures are so far off the evolutionary pathway from humans, but are in some ways similar to us.
    Sara Kiley Watson, Popular Science, 9 Jan. 2020
  • Together, the two- and three-toed flavors of sloth represent a remarkable case of convergent evolution.
    Brian Switek, WIRED, 3 Jan. 2012
  • Lacking concrete proof of Turkey’s involvement, prosecutors pointed to convergent falsehoods told by Alptekin, Flynn and Rafiekian as well as the odd evolution of the project.
    Rachel Weiner, Washington Post, 23 July 2019
  • This looks like a classic case of convergent evolution, but no one has been able to prove the point by demonstrating a benefit derived from it that is connected directly with brood parasitism.
    The Economist, 18 Jan. 2018
  • This is followed by the Plan step, which involves convergent thinking, where ideas are narrowed down and a coherent and realistic strategy is formulated.
    Hilary Tetenbaum, USA TODAY, 23 Mar. 2024
  • This is an example of what biologists call convergent evolution, when organisms evolve the same traits multiple times in different ways.
    Avery Thompson, Popular Mechanics, 10 Apr. 2019
  • The straight-tusked elephant is now an example of convergent evolution, starting from an ancestor that had more in common with African elephants but becoming anatomically more like Asian elephants.
    Brian Switek, Scientific American Blog Network, 12 June 2017
  • That gives biologists a tool with which to explore the phenomenon of convergent evolution, in which unrelated lines with similar ways of life evolve similar adaptations that help them to thrive.
    The Economist, 18 Jan. 2018
  • For the rest of us, one interesting and sometimes confusing aspect of evolution is the difference between convergent and divergent evolution.
    Avery Hurt, Discover Magazine, 1 June 2023
  • When people’s thoughts move freely, the executive parts of their brain—controlling functions like planning and decision-making, also known as convergent thinking—aren’t as activated, Marron has found.
    Matt Fuchs, TIME, 1 Aug. 2024
  • Even when sober, the cannabis users self-reported higher creativity and also performed better on a test measuring convergent thinking, an aspect of creativity for finding solutions to a problem, compared with the nonusers.
    Richard Sima, Anchorage Daily News, 21 Apr. 2023
  • For its part, in an effort to deepen integration, the European Union has actively encouraged member countries to embrace convergent interpretations of the past.
    George Soroka, Foreign Affairs, 14 July 2015
  • The thylacine is a likely example of convergent evolution, nature’s version of independent invention, Berns says.
    Ben Panko, Smithsonian, 19 Jan. 2017
  • Or did the auditory systems evolve independently to perform the same function, a phenomenon called convergent evolution?
    Sarah Lewin Frasier, Scientific American, 1 July 2015
  • Unrelated species sometimes arrive at remarkably similar anatomies through a process called convergent evolution.
    Asher Elbein, New York Times, 25 Feb. 2020
  • Just as convergent evolution caused ichthyosaurs and dolphins to look alike, the demands of the aviation industry have nudged aeronautical engineers toward maximum efficiency with little variation.
    Jeff Wise, Popular Mechanics, 28 Feb. 2017
  • In rodents, defense against predators (interspecies) and alpha males (conspecifics) activates very similar brain structures and behaviors, suggesting that there was substantial convergent evolution of these defenses.
    Dean Mobbs, Scientific American, 20 Sep. 2019
  • Sometimes two unrelated species can undergo convergent evolution, a process by which two different animals independently evolve a similar trait.
    Eva Botkin-Kowacki, The Christian Science Monitor, 3 Nov. 2017
  • New giant carnivorous dinosaur reveals convergent evolutionary trends in theropod arm reduction.
    Sean Mowbray, Discover Magazine, 18 June 2024
  • Its hostile currents and depths of more than 700 feet are an incredible natural laboratory for studying convergent evolution, or how diverse species develop similar environmental adaptations.
    Asher Elbein, New York Times, 25 Feb. 2020

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'convergent.' 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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