dish

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See also: DISH

English

English Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia
Renaissance dish, from 1520, made of maiolica (tin-glazed earthenware)
Renaissance dish, from circa 1520, made of maiolica
Renaissance dish with The Discovery of Achilles, from circa 1555-1560, made of maiolica

Etymology

From Middle English dissh, disch, from Old English disċ (plate; bowl; dish), from Proto-West Germanic *disk (table; dish), from Latin discus. Doublet of dais, desk, disc, discus, disk, and diskos.

Pronunciation

  • enPR: dĭsh, IPA(key): /dɪʃ/
  • Audio (US):(file)
  • Rhymes: -ɪʃ

Noun

dish (countable and uncountable, plural dishes)

  1. A vessel such as a plate for holding or serving food, often flat with a depressed region in the middle.
    Synonym: plate
  2. The contents of such a vessel.
    Synonyms: dishful, plate, plateful
    a dish of stew
  3. (metonymically) A specific type of prepared food.
    a vegetable dish
    this dish is filling and easily made
  4. (in the plural) Tableware (including cutlery, etc, as well as crockery) that is to be or is being washed after being used to prepare, serve and eat a meal.
    It's your turn to wash the dishes.
  5. (telecommunications) A type of antenna with a similar shape to a plate or bowl.
    satellite dish
    radar dish
  6. (slang) A sexually attractive person.
    Synonyms: babe, fox
    quite a dish
    • 1993, Westwood Studios, Lands of Lore: The Throne of Chaos, Virgin Games:
      Have you seen the new apothecary? I think her name is Sadie. What a dish!
  7. (dated) The state of being concave, like a dish, or the degree of such concavity.[1]
    the dish of a wheel
  8. A hollow place, as in a field.[1]
    • 1980, Nebraskaland:
      As I topped the ridge I missed my first shot at a sharptail that flushed from a grassy dish.
    • 1987 02, Brian Garfield, The Arizonans, Bantam, →ISBN:
      He and Stratemeier raced across the flats and dropped into the canyon, climbed swiftly through it and came out at the topside trail , which went straight south through the timber until it dropped into a small grassy dish surrounded by rock peaks.
    • 2006 September 14, Richard Holmes, Martin Marix Evans, A Guide to Battles: Decisive Conflicts in History, OUP Oxford, →ISBN:
      Daylight revealed that the so-called summit was near the edge of a shallow, stony dish, which terminated abruptly in steep slopes, and actually offered poor fields of fire.
  9. (baseball, slang) The home plate.
    • 2008, Paul Byrd, Free Byrd: The Power of a Liberated Life, page 4:
      He said, "I don't like your chances at the dish [home plate] tonight."
    • 2009, Loren Long, Phil Bildner, Magic in the Outfield, page 40:
      At the plate, Graham pounded the dish three times, just like Bubbles did whenever he was up, []
    • 2014, Conor Kelley, The Catcher's Handbook, page 87:
      Also, if you end up getting to the baseball, your pitcher needs to be covering home plate, which pitchers occasionally forget to do. However, if the ball stays near the dish and you have a pitcher on the mound who isn't a space-case, you've got a good shot to get the runner out.
  10. (mining, archaic) A trough in which ore is measured.[1]
  11. (mining, archaic) That portion of the produce of a mine which is paid to the land owner or proprietor.[1]
  12. (slang, uncountable) Gossip.
    • 1989 December 24, Abe Rybeck, “Liberation Without Permission, Pleasure Without Apology”, in Gay Community News, volume 17, number 24, page 5:
      We've been a very lucky community: We've had GCN to collect our deep dish and write it up as political discourse. GCN is not just another clipboard of polite press releases. GCN is the sticky questions, the sweet moments, and the dirty stories that make up our lives.

Derived terms

Descendants

  • Tok Pisin: dis

Translations

The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.

Verb

dish (third-person singular simple present dishes, present participle dishing, simple past and past participle dished)

  1. (transitive) To put in a dish or dishes; serve, usually food.
  2. (informal, slang) To gossip; to relay information about the personal situation of another.
  3. (transitive) To make concave, or depress in the middle, like a dish.[1]
    to dish a wheel by inclining the spokes
  4. (slang, archaic, transitive) To frustrate; to beat; to outwit or defeat.

Derived terms

See also

References

Anagrams