with dispatch

with dispatch
index expeditious

Burton's Legal Thesaurus. . 2006

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  • with dispatch — (archaic) 1. Quickly 2. Without delay • • • Main Entry: ↑dispatch * * * with dispatch very formal phrase as soon and as fast as possible Thesaurus: quickly …   Useful english dictionary

  • with dispatch — very formal as soon and as fast as possible …   English dictionary

  • Dispatch (band) — Dispatch Origin Middlebury, Vermont, United States Genres Jam band, indie folk, roots rock, reggae fusion, rap rock, ska Years active 1996–2002, 2004, 2007, 2009, 2011–pr …   Wikipedia

  • dispatch — (also despatch) ► VERB 1) send off to a destination or for a purpose. 2) deal with (a task or problem) quickly and efficiently. 3) kill. ► NOUN 1) the action or an instance of dispatching. 2) an official report on the latest situation in state or …   English terms dictionary

  • dispatch — [[t]dɪspæ̱tʃ[/t]] dispatches, dispatching, dispatched (in BRIT, also use despatch) 1) VERB If you dispatch someone to a place, you send them there for a particular reason. [FORMAL] [V n adv/prep] He had been continually dispatching scouts ahead …   English dictionary

  • dispatch — di|spatch1 despatch [dıˈspætʃ] v [T] [Date: 1500 1600; : Italian; Origin: dispacciare, from Old French despeechier to set free ] 1.) formal to send someone or something somewhere for a particular purpose dispatch sb/sth to sb/sth ▪ A reporter was …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • dispatch — v. & n. (also despatch) v.tr. 1 send off to a destination or for a purpose (dispatched him with the message). 2 perform (business, a task, etc.) promptly; finish off. 3 kill, execute (dispatched him with the revolver). 4 colloq. eat (food, a meal …   Useful english dictionary

  • dispatch — 1 also despatch BrE verb (T) 1 formal to send someone or something somewhere for a particular purpose: dispatch sb/sth to: A reporter was dispatched to Naples to cover the riot. 2 old fashioned to deliberately kill a person or animal 3 old… …   Longman dictionary of contemporary English

  • dispatch — I UK [dɪˈspætʃ] / US verb [transitive] Word forms dispatch : present tense I/you/we/they dispatch he/she/it dispatches present participle dispatching past tense dispatched past participle dispatched formal 1) to send someone or something… …   English dictionary

  • dispatch — I. verb Etymology: Spanish despachar or Italian dispacciare, from Occitan despachar to get rid of, from Middle French despechier to set free, from Old French, from des dis + pechier (as in enpechier to ensnare) more at impeach Date: 1517… …   New Collegiate Dictionary

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