disperse
verb /dɪˈspɜːs/
  /dɪˈspɜːrs/
Verb Forms
| present simple I / you / we / they disperse |    /dɪˈspɜːs/   /dɪˈspɜːrs/  | 
| he / she / it disperses |    /dɪˈspɜːsɪz/   /dɪˈspɜːrsɪz/  | 
| past simple dispersed |    /dɪˈspɜːst/   /dɪˈspɜːrst/  | 
| past participle dispersed |    /dɪˈspɜːst/   /dɪˈspɜːrst/  | 
| -ing form dispersing |    /dɪˈspɜːsɪŋ/   /dɪˈspɜːrsɪŋ/  | 
- [intransitive, transitive] to move apart and go away in different directions; to make somebody/something do this
- The fog began to disperse.
 - The crowd dispersed quickly.
 - disperse somebody/something Police dispersed the protesters with tear gas.
 
Extra Examples- Police used tear gas to disperse the demonstrators.
 - The cloud was dispersing as the day grew hotter.
 - The crowd slowly began to disperse.
 - The community was dispersed by the war.
 - The pollution in the air will disperse.
 - They dispersed the chemicals with a sheet of water.
 
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb- quickly
 - rapidly
 - widely
 - …
 
- begin to
 
- around
 - over
 - throughout
 - …
 
 - [transitive, intransitive] disperse (something) to spread or to make something spread over a wide area synonym scatter
- The seeds are dispersed by the wind.
 
Extra Examples- The bird-feeding system evenly disperses food and water.
 - Warm air rises and disperses throughout the building.
 - geographically dispersed political and economic power
 - The population in this area is quite widely dispersed.
 
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb- quickly
 - rapidly
 - widely
 - …
 
- begin to
 
- around
 - over
 - throughout
 - …
 
 
Word Originlate Middle English: from Latin dispers- ‘scattered’, from the verb dispergere, from dis- ‘widely’ + spargere ‘scatter, strew’.