to have perception by intuition or insight; conjecture.
Origin: 1275–1325; Middle English < Latin dīvīnus, equivalent to dīv(us) god + -īnus-ine1; replacing Middle English devin(e) < Old French devin < Latin, as above
"to conjure, to guess," originally "to make out by supernatural insight," early 14c., from L. divinus (see divine (adj.)), which also meant "soothsayer." Related: Divined; divining. Divining rod (or wand) attested from 1650s.