English, asked by mukeshrajdev150891, 2 months ago

meaning of dispose
meaning of recreation​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
18

Explanation:

meaning of dispose - get rid of by throwing away or giving or selling to someone else.

meaning of recreation - enjoying yourself and relaxing when you are not working; a way of doing this

Answered by VivekSinghBanger
0

dispose

/dɪˈspəʊz/

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verb

verb: dispose; 3rd person present: disposes; past tense: disposed; past participle: disposed; gerund or present participle: disposing

1.

get rid of by throwing away or giving or selling to someone else.

"the waste is disposed of in the North Sea"

Similar:

throw away

throw out

cast out

get rid of

do away with

discard

jettison

abandon

eject

unload

scrap

destroy

dump

ditch

chuck

chuck out

chuck away

junk

get shut of

get shot of

trash

part with

give away

make over

hand over

deliver up

bestow

transfer

sell

auction

palm off

fob off

see the back of

Opposite:

retain

acquire

keep

INFORMAL

kill.

"all of them have been efficient in disposing of their rivals by deadly means"

Similar:

kill

cause the death of

take/end the life of

do away with

make away with

murder

assassinate

do to death

eliminate

terminate

dispatch

finish off

put to death

execute

slaughter

butcher

massacre

wipe out

destroy

annihilate

erase

eradicate

exterminate

extirpate

decimate

mow down

shoot down

cut down

cut to pieces

put down

put to sleep

bump off

polish off

do in

do for

knock off

top

take out

croak

stiff

blow away

liquidate

dispose of

ice

off

rub out

waste

whack

scrag

smoke

slay

overcome (a rival or threat).

"the Scottish champions were buoyant after they disposed of English champions Leeds"

INFORMAL

consume (food or drink) quickly or enthusiastically.

"she watched him dispose of a large slice of cheese"

Similar:

consume

eat

eat up

devour

ingest

swallow

gobble

gobble up

wolf down

gorge oneself on

feast on

munch

snack on

drink

drink up

guzzle

gulp (down)

swill

imbibe

take

sup

sip

lap

tuck into

scoff (down)

put away

stuff down

polish off

cram in

stuff one's face with

pig oneself on

graze on

down

neck

sink

kill

gollop

shift

get one's laughing gear round

gorb

scarf (down/up)

snarf (down/up)

manducate

ingurgitate

2.

incline (someone) towards a particular activity or mood.

"prolactin, a calming hormone, is released, disposing you towards sleep"

Similar:

incline

encourage

persuade

predispose

make willing

make

move

prompt

lead

induce

inspire

tempt

motivate

actuate

bias

sway

influence

determine

direct

3.

arrange in a particular position.

"the chief disposed his attendants in a circle"

Similar:

arrange

order

place

put

position

orient

array

spread out

range

set up

form

organize

seat

stand

marshal

muster

gather

group

assemble

park

plant

pop

stick

posit

LITERARY

determine the course of events.

"the government proposed, but the trade union movement disposed"

Origin

late Middle English: from Old French disposer, from Latin disponere ‘arrange’, influenced by dispositus ‘arranged’ and Old French poser ‘to place’.

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recreation1

/ˌrɛkrɪˈeɪʃ(ə)n/

noun

noun: recreation; plural noun: recreations; noun: re-creation; plural noun: re-creations

activity done for enjoyment when one is not working.

"she rides for recreation"

Similar:

pleasure

leisure

relaxation

fun

enjoyment

entertainment

amusement

refreshment

restoration

distraction

diversion

play

sport

R and R

jollies

beer and skittles

rec

disport

pastime

hobby

leisure activity

leisure pursuit

leisure interest

divertissement

avocation

Opposite:

work

Origin

late Middle English (also in the sense ‘mental or spiritual consolation’): via Old French from Latin recreatio(n- ), from recreare ‘create again, renew’.

recreation2

/ˌriːkrɪˈeɪʃ(ə)n/

noun

noun: recreation; noun: re-creation

the action or process of creating something again.

"the periodic destruction and recreation of the universe"

a re-enactment or simulation of something.

plural noun: recreations; plural noun: re-creations

"they enjoyed television's recreations of more confident times"

Origin

early 16th century: from re- ‘again’ + creation.

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