dispelling / dɪˈspɛl /

祛除驱散驱除遣散

dispelling 的定义

v. 有主动词 verb

dis·pelled, dis·pel·ling.

  1. to drive off in various directions; disperse; dissipate: to dispel the dense fog.
  2. to cause to vanish; alleviate: to dispel her fears.

dispelling 近义词

v. 动词 verb

drive away thought, belief

更多dispelling例句

  1. The owner was asked Thursday about the rumors that tweet spawned, and while he did not address them directly or confirm whether the meeting took place, he went further than he had in the past to dispel optimism about a possible return.
  2. “The folks that said they would never become a gun owner were trusting the police to protect them, and that delusion has been dispelled,” he said.
  3. A negative would go a long way toward dispelling suspicions that she was somehow complicit.
  4. Nadler subverts the potentially familiar plot once again, dispelling with a penstroke the possibilities for star-crossed love.
  5. So Obama and the Democrats should spend part of next week dispelling the five myths that have the potential to singe.
  6. Later, in a statement, he added, “The White House has not done a very good job of dispelling the concerns of these citizens.”
  7. So just how lucrative—and widespread—is the business of attending meetings and dispelling wisdom?
  8. There was a whole dream-dispelling work to be done before thinking of immediate action.
  9. We despair of ever dispelling these creatures by pungent pleasantries—of routing them by sharp censure.
  10. Moonlight talk drifted easily into talk about artificial methods of dispelling darkness.
  11. The sun, with every promise of a fine day, was slowly dispelling the mist from the valley and woodlands below.
  12. And they recited mantras capable of dispelling Rakshasas and (to that end) also performed rites.