Dispersing [verb]

Definition of Dispersing:

distribute; scatter

Synonyms of Dispersing:


Opposite/Antonyms of Dispersing:


Sentence/Example of Dispersing:

But, the long, art-filled passageways keep crowds dispersed.

“If you’re a toad on an island and there’s nowhere to disperse to, then you don’t need to invest energy into getting these long gangly legs that let you jump straight for days on end, because there’s nowhere to go,” Baxter-Gilbert says.

Before dispersing from the studio, Pohorski and Vondrak estimated they had between 50 and 60 percent of the voice over work finalized.

If you see a house with a line of six families in front of it, it’s probably best to come back later after the crowd has dispersed.

A few weeks ago, while showing off the new Echo, Tom Taylor, Amazon senior vice president of Alexa, told Fortune that one of the reasons for the Echo’s redesign was to allow sound to better disperse through a room.

The two of us had a honeycomb in each hand before we heard the maintenance trucks arrive to disperse us with the bees.

Before police can begin making unlawful assembly arrests, they must first declare a gathering to be unlawful and order crowd members to disperse.

Collectively, remotely dispersed smoke, though undetectable by satellites, creates as much dimming as the dense plumes from active wildfires.

It’s possible that some amount of asbestos would remain or could be dispersed in the course of doing the work, Aines says.

She was charged with failure to disperse and interference with official acts and has pleaded not guilty.