[
UK
/dɪspˈəʊz/
]
[ US /dɪˈspoʊz/ ]
[ US /dɪˈspoʊz/ ]
VERB
-
make fit or prepared
Your education qualifies you for this job -
throw or cast away
Put away your worries -
give, sell, or transfer to another
She disposed of her parents' possessions -
make receptive or willing towards an action or attitude or belief
Their language inclines us to believe them -
place or put in a particular order
the dots are unevenly disposed
How To Use dispose In A Sentence
- The friend had also overheard the man say he had disposed of the handgun used in the crime, according to the in - formant. Just A 'Random' Crime
- We must remember that the prime motive for Housmann's boulevards and circuses was to ensure that a strategically placed cannon could fire down many streets, quelling the citizens who were periodically disposed to revolution.
- He thought the thieves would dispose of the shop's stock at car boot sales or use them for family gifts.
- This illness predisposes you to gain weight
- Even the sight of a gibbet, if it assured him that one robber was safely disposed of by justice, never failed to remind him how many remained still unhanged. Rob Roy
- The Company's flagship product, the Sharps Disposal by Mail System (R), is a cost-effective and easy-to-use solution to dispose of medical waste such as hypodermic needles, lancets and any other medical device or objects used to puncture or lacerate the skin (referred to as "sharps"). Undefined
- A disposer, like most appliances, once used, suffers from disuse. Houston Chronicle
- Women aren't disposed to sweeter tastes, or men to sourer, Bell says – the fact that we think they are is an element of our cultural story. The truth about men, women and food
- You're most welcome to join us if you feel so disposed.
- They disposed of them without much trouble, because their enemies had no organization or strength in any type of numbers.