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Crossword clues for diligent

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
diligent
adjective
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADVERB
most
▪ Rooker's survey shows that even the most diligent of officers meet with obstruction.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ The book required ten years of diligent research.
▪ Tony is a very diligent student.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ After years of diligent research, he had concluded that this was the only copy still in existence.
▪ As a pastor he was diligent and although iconoclastic, he defended the clergy against outside attack.
▪ As an example of unconscious wealth Ely cited an obedient, diligent, and faithful son.
▪ I know all of you are hardworking, diligent people, and I respect you for that.
▪ It is uncharacteristically diligent of a minister to seek precisely to understand what money spent will accomplish.
▪ It took some curious and diligent minds, and sometimes even some courage.
▪ They have a powerful cultural drive to achieve, which makes them extremely diligent, effective and reliable workers.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Diligent

Diligent \Dil"i*gent\, a. [F. diligent, L. diligens, -entis, p. pr. of diligere, dilectum, to esteem highly, prefer; di- = dis- + legere to choose. See Legend.]

  1. Prosecuted with careful attention and effort; careful; painstaking; not careless or negligent.

    The judges shall make diligent inquisition.
    --Deut. xix. 18.

  2. Interestedly and perseveringly attentive; steady and earnest in application to a subject or pursuit; assiduous; industrious.

    Seest thou a man diligent in his business? he shall stand before kings.
    --Prov. xxii. 29.

    Diligent cultivation of elegant literature.
    --Prescott.

    Syn: Active; assiduous; sedulous; laborious; persevering; attentive; industrious.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
diligent

mid-14c., from Old French diligent (14c.), from Latin diligentem "attentive, assiduous" (see diligence). Related: Diligently.

Wiktionary
diligent

a. Performing with intense concentration, focus, responsible regard.

WordNet
diligent
  1. adj. quietly and steadily persevering especially in detail or exactness; "a diligent (or patient) worker"; "with persevering (or patient) industry she revived the failing business" [syn: persevering]

  2. characterized by care and perseverence in carrying out tasks; "a diligent detective investigates all clues"; "a diligent search of the files" [ant: negligent]

Usage examples of "diligent".

The other acorn, although emplaced in a setting attuned to the first through both similarity and contagion, did not germinate as a result of the spell and, in fact, could not be located despite diligent search at the close of the experiment.

From their anchorage to the docks of Askew was but a few minutes of their diligent rowing.

If there were questions about the Diligent or her supposedly illicit purpose, Drogue would hear of them, eventually.

During these long months, before the thaw of spring, Gena paid diligent duty to the people.

Condulmer, who liked me none the better for having all the appearance of being in high favour with Madame Zorzi, to whom before my appearance he had paid diligent court.

The son had been diligent, and would have passed for a young man of culture.

They are great friends of Jews and itinerants, hand-in-glove with smugglers, Ladies Bountiful to pedlers, are diligent readers of puffs and advertisements, and eternal haunters of sales and auctions.

It was there that Lorenzo Daza gave Juvenal Urbino his first lessons in chess, and he was such a diligent pupil that chess became an incurable addiction that tormented him until the day of his death.

Sub vesperum consilio convocato cohortatus ut ea quae imperasset diligenter industrieque administrarent, naves, quas Metiosedo deduxerat, singulas equitibus Romanis attribuit, et prima confecta vigilia quattuor milia passuum secundo flumine silentio progredi ibique se exspectari iubet.

Vpon the pointe of which Obelisk, with great arte and diligence, was fastned a copper base, in the which also there was a turning deuise infixed: whervpon did stand the shape of a beautifull nimph framed of the aforesayd matter, able to amaze the continuall diligent behoulder.

For nor without great cause, from place to place, with a diligent and iealous examination I did carefully consider the large extention of the inmost intricate braunches, and their proportionate strength and thicknesse, so cunninglie doone, by such an arte, boulde attempt, and continued intent, they were so aptly led out, whether by sowdering, or by the Hammer, or by casting, or by all three, mee thought it an vnpossible worke to make a couering of such a breadth, and so twysted and twyned together.

Our Apostleship requires, that the Catholic faith should especially in this Our day increase and flourish everywhere, and that all heretical depravity should be driven far from the frontiers and bournes of the Faithful, We very gladly proclaim and even restate those particular means and methods whereby Our pious desire may obtain its wished effect, since when all errors are uprooted by Our diligent avocation as by the hoe of a provident husbandman, a zeal for, and the regular observance of, Our holy Faith will be all the more strongly impressed upon the hearts of the faithful.

The government of a mighty empire may assuredly suffice to occupy the time, and the abilities, of a mortal: yet the diligent prince, without aspiring to the unsuitable reputation of profound learning, always reserved some moments of his leisure for the instructive amusement of reading.

On one side hung a very large oil painting so thoroughly besmoked, and every way defaced, that in the unequal crosslights by which you viewed it, it was only by diligent study and a series of systematic visits to it, and careful inquiry of the neighbors, that you could any way arrive at an understanding of its purpose.

After considering him attentively, I recognized in him a diligent getter-up of miscellaneous works, which bustled off well with the trade.