different between dispend vs dispeed
dispend
English
Etymology
From Old French despendre ( > French dépendre), from Latin dispendere.
Verb
dispend (third-person singular simple present dispends, present participle dispending, simple past and past participle dispended or dispent)
- (obsolete) To spend or expend.
- (obsolete) To waste or squander.
- (obsolete) To distribute or dispense.
dispend From the web:
- dispense means
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dispeed
English
Etymology
dis- +? speed
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /d?s?pi?d/
Verb
dispeed (third-person singular simple present dispeeds, present participle dispeeding, simple past and past participle dispeeded or disped)
- (obsolete) To send off with speed; to dispatch.
- 1808, Robert Southey, Chronicle of the Cid, from the Spanish
- Then they dispeeded themselves of the Cid and of their mother-in-law.
- 1808, Robert Southey, Chronicle of the Cid, from the Spanish
References
dispeed in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.
Anagrams
- depside
dispeed From the web:
- what speed internet do i need
- what speeds are typically safe in the city
- what speeds up your metabolism
- what speed is mach 1
- what speed is terminal velocity
- what speed does light travel
- what speed breaks the sound barrier
- what speeds up chemical reactions
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