English edit

Etymology edit

in- +‎ disperse

Verb edit

indisperse (third-person singular simple present indisperses, present participle indispersing, simple past and past participle indispersed)

  1. To disperse within or throughout.
    • 1907, M. A. Wyllie, Norway and Its Fjords, page 169:
      A few more farms indispersed with little birch trees gathered here and there by the mountains.
    • 2009, Sarah Nicholson, Belly : pregnancy journal, page 7:
      Indispersed among the creative explorations of over 50 contributors is space for you to add to your own creative energies: write, paint, draw, add photographs, images, memorabilia, your thoughts, questions, responses, dreams and wishes.
    • 2016, Thomas Corfield, The World Is Badly Made:
      When they approached, he turned from them and made swallowing noises indispersed with burps.
    • 2016, Mark A. Pierce Sr., Four and Twenty Blackbirds, page 95:
      The bee finished its inspection of the non-flower and veered off towards some scattered purple wild flowers, indispersed among a stand of foxtails.
    • 2022, Nancy J. Membrez, Eliseo Subiela in Life and Cinema: The Persistence of Vision, page 73:
      He also indisperses documentary footage from the Spanish Civil War, the Russian struggle in World War II and the Russian post-war.