Definitionv. to cause to separate and go in different directions
Last update: October 6, 2015
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He dissipated all his income in drinking. [verb]
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She is painted in a specially developed white paint to accommodate these changes and to dissipate the heat generated by supersonic flight. [verb]
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Her son's letter dissipated all her fears. [Please select]
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Some of our concern about the national denominations will dissipate due to this dismantling of bureaucracies. [verb]
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As for us, Karnis did not dissipate his money in riotous living. [verb]
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The voice of Edward calling him by name dissipated all alarm, and in another minute he was in the arms of his brother and sisters. [verb]
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I remember the air with which he said that, with a tone that was intended to give me pleasure, and dissipate my doubts. [verb]
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The mist in which the name of Emma Goldman has so long been enveloped is gradually beginning to dissipate. [verb]
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"Oraetes's frown, strangely enough, began to dissipate." [verb]
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Next his gaze turned to the triumphal arch in the road below, which wore a peculiarly dissipated look at this hour. [verb]
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On his last day, sobbing, he asked her and his absent son to forgive him for having dissipated their propertythat being the chief fault of which he was conscious. [verb]
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