(verb - to design or plan)
I will devise a plan to thwart the competition and rule the universe!
I'm just not certain that the answer I would devise will be satisfactory.
How did Eisenhower devise the plan for D-Day?
Who will devise the next vise?
(noun - legal clause)
Harry left a devise in his will, leaving all his property to charity.
"i sat there contemplating whether or not the plan i had just devised would work"
We will devise a way to raise the money for the child's surgery.
Devise is the verb, while device is the noun. We will devise a device for that purpose.
She needed to devise a solution.He devised a way to tow cars.
The group had to devise a plan, and fast!
Known as a counting devise, the abacus has been in use for many centuries
The word devise, used as a verb, means to form by creating new things or ideas. It can also mean to plan or bring about. Devise when used as a noun means the act of disposing of property with a will.
We need to devise a plan to get mom out of the house so we can decorate for her surprise party. Did General Washington devise a plan to expose Benedict Arnold's treasonous activities? Somehow, Dad was able to devise a way to shut off the lights without getting out of bed.
I will devise an effective plan for eliminating the pests.
Yes, the word "devise" can be used as both a noun and a verb.
She has a retentive memory, able to remember even the smallest details of past events.
use it by saying- how can you use the word ebullient in a sentence?
I'm hard-pressed to elucidate an answer to your query. Every query has more than one answer. My results of my research do not definitively resolve your query. Is that the finest query you could devise on the subject?