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dispense
[ dih-spens ]
verb (used with object)
- to deal out; distribute:
to dispense wisdom.
- to administer:
to dispense the law without bias.
- Pharmacology. to make up and distribute (medicine), especially on prescription.
- Roman Catholic Church. to grant dispensation.
verb (used without object)
- to grant dispensation.
noun
- Obsolete. expenditure.
verb phrase
- to do without; forgo:
to dispense with preliminaries.
- to do away with; rid of.
- to grant exemption from a law or promise.
dispense
/ dɪˈspɛns /
verb
- tr to give out or issue in portions
- tr to prepare and distribute (medicine), esp on prescription
- tr to administer (the law, etc)
- intrfoll bywith to do away (with) or manage (without)
- to grant a dispensation to (someone) from (some obligation of church law)
- to exempt or excuse from a rule or obligation
Usage
Other Words From
- undis·pensed adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of dispense1
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
Bartenders need only pour in the ingredients and pull the handle, dispensing the sweet, frothed-up martinis in a mere 20 seconds.
Turns out, an intermittent schedule of reinforcement — occasional pellets of counterfeit love dispensed like unpredictable manna — proves most effective to keep us pressing.
But when the composer and instrumentalist Tyshawn Sorey set out to write one for saxophone and orchestra several years ago, he quickly dispensed with convention.
For three years starting when he was just 12 years old, Devon Werkheiser dispensed advice for bearing the indignities of middle school as the title character in the Nickelodeon series “Ned’s Declassified School Survival Guide.”
Butting one fragment of skin, makeup, hair and headgear up against another, Sherman dispenses with the capacity of Photoshop to smooth out edges.
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