1. disperse - Adjective
2. disperse - Verb
To scatter abroad; to drive to different parts; to distribute; to diffuse; to spread; as, the Jews are dispersed among all nations.
To scatter, so as to cause to vanish; to dissipate; as, to disperse vapors.
To separate; to go or move into different parts; to vanish; as, the company dispersed at ten o'clock; the clouds disperse.
To distribute wealth; to share one's abundance with others.
Source: Webster's dictionaryPollution is nothing but the resources we are not harvesting. We allow them to disperse because we've been ignorant of their value. Buckminster Fuller
Let us disperse from our aloofness and serve the weak who made us strong, and cleanse the country in which we live. Let us teach this miserable nation to smile and rejoice with heaven's bounty and glory of life and freedom. Kahlil Gibran
... so vast, so limitless in capacity is man's imagination to disperse and burn away the rubble-dross of fact and probability, leaving only truth and dream. William Faulkner
Diplomacy in a sense is the opposite of writing. You have to disperse yourself so much: the lady who comes in crying because she's had a fight with the secretary; exports and imports; students in trouble; thumbtacks for the embassy. Carlos Fuentes
Clouds pass and disperse. Are those the faces of love, those pale irretrievables? Is it for such I agitate my heart? Sylvia Plath
Monkeys must disperse once their tree falls. Chinese Proverb