The difference between dispose of and dispose off is that one is correct and the other is not. You would use dispose of if you mean to get rid of something.
It means that that person is a smooth talker and can attract attention easily. For example a snake charmer plays smooth music and gets the snake's attention.
'Hath shewn' means the same as 'has shown'. As in, "experience hath shewn that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed". Thomas Jefferson. 'Hath' means 'has' in the same way that 'doth' means 'does'. You can consider them abbreviations for 'haveth' and 'doeth'.
It depends on how it's being used. You could "dispose" of something by selling it, throwing it away, or donating it to someone else.
He meant that he not that good of a person
Alba Ma Hath is Arabic for: Thou hast good fortune. Or to make more sence, He who is good has good fortune
Pan means world and Gloss implies smooth; Pangloss in Candide is a person who views the world as smooth and uncorrupted, and therefore is optimistic - "All is for the best, in the best of all possible worlds."
There is a delicate difference. "Suave" means smooth; a suave person is a smooth talker. "Urbane" derives from the word for a city; an urbane person is sophisticated. Both words suggest someone who is unflappable; an urbane person may be even more unflappable than a suave one.
Smooth
You mean medication. Mendicants are beggars or bums in French!
Glassy typically refers to something that is transparent, smooth, reflective, and shiny, resembling glass in appearance or texture. It can also describe a person's expression or demeanor as lacking emotion or expressionless.
Yes dispose means getting rid of or trashing it.