English to Bengali Dictionary disperse

disperse

অদৃশ্য করা
definition
verb
storms can disperse seeds via high altitudes
distribute or spread over a wide area.
adjective
emulsions should be examined after storage for droplet size of the disperse phase
denoting a phase dispersed in another phase, as in a colloid.
translation of 'disperse'
চতুর্দিকে ছড়িয়ে পড়া বা ছড়ানো,
ভিন্ন ভিন্ন স্থানে পাঠানো
verb
বিচ্ছুরিত করা,
ঠিকরান,
বিকীর্ণ করা,
অদৃশ্য করা,
বিকীর্ণ হত্তয়া,
ভঙ্গ করা,
অদৃশ্য হত্তয়া,
বিক্ষিপ্ত করা
example
On the 23rd, cold and dry weather blew in from the East, and this caused the clouds to 'disperse' , lifting the veil that the Germans had been fighting under.
The ceilings are configured to 'disperse' reflected light evenly throughout the rooms.
These variables allow to control the diameter of the 'disperse' phase droplets (emulsion or microemulsion).
Aerobic activities like cross-country skiing demand thin layers that rapidly 'disperse' sweat and body heat - keeping you cool, not warm.
The particles are referred to as the 'disperse' phase while the other phase is termed the dispersion medium or continuous phase.
Technically, the liquid which forms droplets is known as the 'disperse' phase, and the liquid in which these drops are scattered is known as the dispersion medium.
In a repeat of Sunday's clashes, police in full riot gear charged the protesters and used water cannons to 'disperse' the angry crowds.
Interior minister Francois Boko said soldiers had fired warning shots to 'disperse' a crowd of protesters who had surrounded their vehicle in the neighbourhood of Be, an opposition stronghold.
We had such hot weather and there wasn't a lot of wind to 'disperse' it.
There was no wind to 'disperse' the odor that hung over Kumar like a malignant bouquet: raw kerosene, raw vegetables, raw sewage.
The voices of the towns people broke out into a hive of excited chatter as they began to 'disperse' in different directions.
The weather took a turn for the worse as a fierce force 11 storm forced the convoy to 'disperse' over a wide area.
End result: clear skies letting in the sun and no strong winds to 'disperse' the heat.
Is there any indication in the tapes that they have learned how to 'disperse' it over a wide area, say in a public theater, or a train station?
The colloidal particles of the 'disperse' phase are equivalent to the solute of a solution and the continuous phase is equivalent to the solvent.
The location could not have been better: within easy reach of Washington, yet protected by the Allegheny mountains and with prevailing winds from Canada to 'disperse' any radiation.
He reasoned that any effect due to nearby cities would be more pronounced in calm conditions, when the wind could not 'disperse' the heat.
About 30 firefighters from across the county battled for more than four hours to spray water onto the gas cloud in a bid to 'disperse' it.
The sun had gone, I was too late in the day, and the mist had risen and 'dispersed' , coating the sky an even grey.
The clouds as if by divine interposition were entirely 'dispersed' and I was once again invited to the grateful task of repeating my observations.
Light at each end of the optical spectrum is 'dispersed' by a different amount, since the refractive index of any medium depends on frequency.
Our Founders emphasized that immigrants would have to be 'dispersed' among what they described as the English population in this country.
Because the disease cannot be passed from person to person, infecting large populations would require 'dispersing' spores over a wide area.
This signal at extended wavelengths outside of absorbance bands is characteristic of the 'dispersive' part of differential light scattering.
Furthermore, as a company's scope increases, it may have to distribute its goods and services in progressively more 'dispersed' areas.
The oxide is present as finely 'dispersed' particles, which interact with vacancies and dislocations and prevent their easy movement.
A flat slab of the stuff would focus light, rather than 'dispersing' it, as normal materials would.
One hundred twenty-eight natal males from the three study clans survived beyond the age of 16 months and thus were potential 'dispersers' .
It is clear from our studies that although 'dispersive' light scattering perturbs band intensities, neither absorption flattening nor differential scattering is sufficient to account for these changes.
It is especially common in soils that have high expansion rates and/or highly 'dispersible' clay minerals, and in locations which experience intense sequences of wet and dry periods.
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