disperse
dis·perse / disˈpərs/ • v. [tr.] distribute or spread over a wide area: storms can disperse seeds via high altitudes camping sites could be dispersed among trees so as to be out of sight. ∎ go or cause to go in different directions or to different destinations: [intr.] the crowd dispersed | [tr.] the police used tear gas to disperse the protesters. ∎ cause (gas, smoke, mist, or cloud) to thin out and eventually disappear: winds dispersed the bomb's radioactive cloud high in the atmosphere. ∎ [intr.] thin out and disappear: the earlier mist had dispersed. ∎ Physics divide (light) into constituents of different wavelengths. ∎ Chem. distribute (small particles) uniformly in a medium.• adj. Chem. denoting a phase dispersed in another phase, as in a colloid: emulsions should be examined after storage for droplet size of the disperse phase.DERIVATIVES: dis·pers·er n.dis·pers·i·ble adj.dis·per·sive / -siv/ adj.