0 past simple and past participle of dispatch --
1 to send something, especially goods or a message, somewhere for a particular purpose: --
2 to kill someone: --
The trainees in the programme were also dispatched to respond to any outbreaks that might occur.
The basic argument for primitivism, then, is similar to the argument for eliminativism: the alternatives must be dispatched first.
A military garrison was dispatched to the island, but they withdrew after a one-year stay.
A predatory panther later invades the sown field at one point and is dispatched by a huntsman.
As each processor (asynchronously) completes the generation on which it is currently working, emigrants from that processor's population are dispatched to four toroidally adjacent processors.
This alternative response comprised a district nurse or an emergency nurse practitioner dispatched with a paramedic to visit low-priority emergency calls.
British experts were immediately dispatched to examine the agent.
Two thousand, rather than the requested one thousand, were promptly dispatched.