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Perhaps a corruption of Middle Englishmesh(“mash”), compare muss, or derived from Etymology 2 "mixed foods, as for animals". Compare also Old Englishmes(“dung, excrement”).
A disagreeable mixture or confusion of things; hence, a situation resulting from blundering or from misunderstanding.
2006 Feb. 3, Graham Linehan, The IT Crowd, Season 1, Episode 4:
No, look, I know that the place looks like a bit of a mess but it's actually a very delicate ecosystem. Everything is connected. It's like the rainforest. You change one thing, even the tiniest bit, and the whooole rainforest dies. You don't want the rainforest to die, do ya?
(archaic) A quantity of food set on a table at one time; provision of food for a person or party for one meal; also, the food given to an animal at one time.
c. 1555, Hugh Latimer, letter to one in prison for the profession of the Gospel
At their savoury dinner set / Of herbs and other country messes.
1903, Henry Yule, Arthur Burnell, Hobson-Jobson:
consists of meat, fish, fruit, or vegetables, cooked with a quantity of bruised spices and turmeric […]; and a little of this gives a flavour to a large mess of rice.
(collective) A number of persons who eat together, and for whom food is prepared in common, especially military personnel who eat at the same table.
But that our Feaſts / In euery Meſſe, haue folly; and the Feeders / Digeſt with a Cuſtome,
A building or room in which mess is eaten.
1956, Anthony Burgess, Time for a Tiger (The Malayan Trilogy), published 1972, page 20:
The police mess had formerly been a maternity home for the wives of the Sultans of the state. Faded and tatty, peeling, floorboards eaten and unpolished, its philoprogenitive glory was a memory only.
A set of four(from the old practice of dividing companies into sets of four at dinner).
1913, Pearson's Magazine, volume 36, part 2, page 373:
Eton is renowned for its "messes," and "strawberry mess" is Empress of them all, with raspberry mess as a very good second. It does not at all convey the joys of a "mess" to say that it consists of iced fruit and cream, and somewhat resembles a "fool." It is a thing apart, and should be approached with bated breath and unimpaired capacity.
1916, Edward Frederic Benson, David Blaize, page 284:
"I'll stand you both strawberry mess." It was perfectly impossible for David not to feel elated at sitting down to strawberry-mess with two members of the eleven, in the full light of day, and in sight of the school generally […]
2014, Lindsey Bareham, Just One Pot:
Eton mess, for example, which is another name for strawberry fool, links the name of a famous public school with disorder or the army slang for a meal, [...] One friend remembered a banana mess of mashed banana with two scoops of ice cream and loads of cream, and thought the strawberry version something that might be served at the 4th June College picnic, [...]
2015, Darra Goldstein, Sidney Mintz, Michael Krondl, Laura Mason, The Oxford Companion to Sugar and Sweets, Oxford University Press, USA, →ISBN, page 243:
Similar desserts [to Eton Mess] include Lancing Mess (made with bananas), served at Lancing College in Sussex, and Clare College Mush[…]
2020, Nigel Napier-Andrews, Gentleman's Portion: The Cookbook:
One Old Etonian rages that at school the dessert was simply called 'strawberry mess' and was very popular in the tuck shop. It is only outside Eton that the school's name has been added. A similar 'banana mess' is credited to School in Sussex, […]
1836, George Simpson & al., HBC Standing Rules and Regulations, §18:
Resolved 18. That no Guide or Interpreter whether at the Factory Depot or Inland be permitted to mess with Commissioned Gentlemen or Clerks in charge of Posts; but while at the Depot they will be allowed per Week 4 days ordinary rations...
(auxiliary)Used in conditional or counterfactual statements to show relief that one didn't do something that would have led to a bad or regrettable result.