indispersed

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English

Etymology

From in- +‎ dispersed.

Adjective

indispersed (comparative more indispersed, superlative most indispersed)

  1. Not dispersed.
    • 1917, Jerry Miles Humphrey, A Soul's First Day in Heaven, page 32:
      The massive sides, massive they seemed, of this ravine were built of clouds which ever hung there indispersed, and caught on every vaporous fold and skirt the glory of the sportive rays that streamed forth from the happy paradise beyond innumerable.
    • 1917, Frank Landon Humphreys, Life and Times of David Humphreys:
      As Lincoln approached, the Insurgents who were collected in bodies of from 100 to 150 & 200 fled, some of these are still indispersed & lurk on the frontiers of N. York, & Vermont.
    • 1927, Charles Guignebert, Christianity, Past and Present, page 101:
      This God is the Most High God, entirely distinct from Nature, and remains indispersed in Nature by any tendency to pantheism.
  2. Dispersed within
    • 1971, Journal of Polymer Science: Polymer symposia. Part C, page 328:
      Sections of the purified Valonia cell wall were subjected to ultrasonic vibrations for 4 hourse after which the larger indispersed fragments were removed.
    • 1976, Raymond A. Cartwright, D. B. Cartwright, The Holy Island of Lindisfarne and the Farne Islands, page 26:
      banks, salt marshes, mud flats and silty deposits with many indispersed salt-water channels known as guts or goats.
    • 2005, Ravindra K. Dhir, Judith E. Halliday, Erika Csetenyi, Young Researchers' Forum, page 224:
      Large indispersed clumps of fibres, with diameters on the approximate order of 3 to 12 mm , were noted in each mix that was produced.

Verb

indispersed

  1. simple past and past participle of indisperse