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Definition of dispatch verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

dispatch

verb
 
/dɪˈspætʃ/
 
/dɪˈspætʃ/
(British English also despatch)
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they dispatch
 
/dɪˈspætʃ/
 
/dɪˈspætʃ/
he / she / it dispatches
 
/dɪˈspætʃɪz/
 
/dɪˈspætʃɪz/
past simple dispatched
 
/dɪˈspætʃt/
 
/dɪˈspætʃt/
past participle dispatched
 
/dɪˈspætʃt/
 
/dɪˈspætʃt/
-ing form dispatching
 
/dɪˈspætʃɪŋ/
 
/dɪˈspætʃɪŋ/
jump to other results
  1. dispatch somebody/something (to…) (formal) to send somebody/something somewhere, especially for a special purpose
    • Troops have been dispatched to the area.
    • A courier was dispatched to collect the documents.
  2. dispatch something (to somebody/something) (formal) to send a letter, package or message somewhere
    • Goods are dispatched within 24 hours of your order reaching us.
    • Weir dispatched 50 messages back to base.
  3. dispatch somebody/something (formal) to deal or finish with somebody/something quickly and completely
    • He dispatched the younger player in straight sets.
  4. dispatch somebody/something (old-fashioned) to kill a person or an animal
  5. Word Originearly 16th cent.: from Italian dispacciare or Spanish despachar ‘expedite’, from dis-, des- (expressing reversal) + the base of Italian impacciare, Spanish empachar ‘hinder’.
See dispatch in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary
dizzy
adjective
 
 
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