- characterized by diffusion
WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2026
dif•fu•sive
(di fyo̅o̅′siv),USA pronunciation adj.
dif•fu′sive•ly, adv.
dif•fu′sive•ness, n.
- tending to diffuse;
characterized by diffusion.
- diffuse + -ive 1605–15
dif•fu′sive•ness, n.
Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers::
diffusive /dɪˈfjuːsɪv/ adj
dif•fuse /v. dɪˈfyuz; adj. -ˈfyus/USA pronunciation
v., -fused, -fusing, adj.
v.
adj.
dif•fuse•ness, n. [uncountable]
dif•fu•sion /dɪˈfyuʒən/USA pronunciation n. [uncountable]diffusion of gases into the atmosphere.
dif•fu•sive /dɪˈfyusɪv/USA pronunciation adj. See -fus-.
WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2026v.
- to (cause to) spread or scatter widely: [no object]The light diffused into the room.[~ + object]Diffuse the light in your room to avoid glare.
- Physics to spread out freely without restriction;
disseminate:[~ + object]The printing press helped diffuse knowledge.
adj.
- widely spread or scattered;
dispersed:The room was bathed in soft, diffuse light. - characterized by wordiness in speech or writing;
disjointed:I got lost in your rather diffuse essay.
dif•fuse•ness, n. [uncountable]
dif•fu•sion /dɪˈfyuʒən/USA pronunciation n. [uncountable]diffusion of gases into the atmosphere.
dif•fu•sive /dɪˈfyusɪv/USA pronunciation adj. See -fus-.
dif•fuse
(v. di fyo̅o̅z′;adj. di fyo̅o̅s′),USA pronunciation v., -fused, -fusing, adj.
v.t.
v.i.
adj.
dif•fuse•ly
(di fyo̅o̅s′lē),USA pronunciation adv.
dif•fuse′ness, n.
v.t.
- to pour out and spread, as a fluid.
- to spread or scatter widely or thinly;
disseminate. - Physicsto spread by diffusion.
v.i.
- to spread.
- Physicsto intermingle by diffusion.
adj.
- characterized by great length or discursiveness in speech or writing;
wordy. - widely spread or scattered;
dispersed. - Botanywidely or loosely spreading.
- Optics(of reflected light) scattered, as from a rough surface (opposed to specular).
- Latin diffūsus spread, poured forth. See dif-, fuse2
- Anglo-French)
- Middle English (1350–1400
'diffusive' also found in these entries (note: many are not synonyms or translations):