0 past simple and past participle of disburse
1 to pay out money, usually from an amount that has been collected for a particular purpose:
The local authorities annually disburse between £50 million and £100 million on arts projects.
For example, if the claimant suffered no loss, must wrongfully acquired gains be disbursed?
Wages were disbursed irregularly, the sum of each payment fluctuated, and the monthly wage served as the standard for wage payment.
A lot of aid was disbursed from the masjid.
Of the $25 million allocated for the project, only $9.1 million was disbursed.
The clothiers then collected the woven cloth from the families and disbursed wages in return.
Thus, in these countries a portion of severance payments might be disbursed even if the company is insolvent and liquidated.
From their income parish priests disbursed money on various activities.
They are evenly split between clustered and disbursed settlement patterns and virtually all have clear boundaries.