Noun a small dish of ice cream Each person made a dish for the potluck supper. The restaurant serves some of my favorite dishes. We piled all the dishes in the sink after dinner. Will you wash the breakfast dishes, please? a sink full of dirty dishesVerb The two of them are always dishing about their coworkers. a DJ who dishes the celebrity gossip as part of the morning programming See More
Recent Examples on the Web
Noun
The dish is served on warm plates at room temperature. Bill Esparza, Washington Post, 7 Sep. 2022 If mom's favorite accessory is a ring, this religious ring dish was made for her. Elizabeth Berry, Woman's Day, 24 Aug. 2022 Having spent years happily eating goat birria at L.A.'s El Parian, the dish to me should always be made with goat. Laurie Ochoa, Los Angeles Times, 30 July 2022 The dish is served with a baby kougin-amann on the side and topped at the table with warm caramel sauce. Anna Mazurek, Chron, 22 July 2022 The calamari dish is served with ginger, scallion, sesame seeds, carrot daikon salad, and pickled ginger vinaigrette. Globe Staff, BostonGlobe.com, 11 July 2022 The dish is served mostly after spring whaling, Oyagak said. Alena Naiden, Anchorage Daily News, 2 July 2022 Each dish is made to pair perfectly with the star of the show: Pisco, Peru’s national spirit, which is made through a process of distilling wine into a pure grape liquor in an ancestral process that dates back to the 17th century. Michaela Trimble, Vogue, 13 June 2022 The dish must be served on a flat plate, not in a bowl, and eaten with a fork.CNN, 1 May 2022
Verb
For several weeks each year, in late summer and early fall, Puebla recognizes chiles en nogada season, coinciding with the availability of some of the definitive ingredients that have made this dish a classic. Bill Esparza, Washington Post, 7 Sep. 2022 Add dill and crumbled feta cheese for the savory, tangy bite that sets this Easter dish apart. Sarah Martens, Better Homes & Gardens, 26 Aug. 2022 Lemon zest, briny olives and feta give this easy sheet pan dish a burst of Mediterranean flavor. Tribune News Service, cleveland, 15 Aug. 2022 After a year of buildout on North Dixie Highway, the first Florida outpost of this Brooklyn barbecue icon is finally expected to open on June 30 — ready to dish smoked brisket and baby back ribs, cheddar-jalapeño sausage and homemade coleslaw. Phillip Valys, Sun Sentinel, 23 June 2022 The large slab of feta makes this dish a fatty, high-calorie luxury. Ann Maloney, Washington Post, 26 July 2022 Huot, who grew up on a farm in Canada, was free to dish. Ben Mcgrath, The New Yorker, 25 July 2022 Actress and filmmaker, Lena Dunham, appeared on SiriusXM's The Jess Cagle Show to dish about her new movie, Sharp Stick. Keith Langston, EW.com, 1 Aug. 2022 As part of Pride Month, The Courier Journal asked some of Louisville's most popular drag queens to dish on themselves in four exclusive interviews. Mandy Mclaren, The Courier-Journal, 8 June 2022 See More
Word History
Etymology
Noun
Middle English dyssh, disch, going back to Old English disc, borrowed from Latin discus "discus, kind of plate, gong" borrowed from Greek dískos "discus," in Late Greek also "dish, round mirror, the sun's disk, gong" — more at discus
Note: In later imperial Latin (Apuleius's Metamorphoses, Ulpian), the word discus is found with the meaning "dish, platter," a fairly natural extension given the shape of a discus. This sense is continued in Late Latin, as in the Vulgate, where the head of John the Baptist is brought to Herodias's daughter "in disco." It is found as a borrowing in Celtic languages (Old Irish tesc "dish"; Old Welsh discl, Welsh dysgl "dish, platter," from a diminutive *disculus; Old Breton discou "dishes") and Germanic—in addition to Old English, Old High German tisc. In Romance and the continental Germanic languages, however, the sense "dish" was largely replaced by a new sense "table," perhaps because the small, round tables in use for serving approximated the function of dishes. In Medieval Latin this meaning of discus can be found from the late eighth century (Capitulare de villis). The etymon is well attested in Gallo-Romance and in northern and central Italy: Italian desco "dining table" (13th-century Tuscan, also in medieval Lombard), Old Occitan des,desc "table," Old French deis "table of honor set up on a platform" (see dais). In Germanic, compare Old Saxon disk "table," Middle Dutch disc, desc "dining table," Old High German tisc (the sense "table" effectively ousting "dish" by Middle High German). A final permutation of the Medieval Latin word was the sense "writing table, desk," attested in British sources as descus, desca (from the late 13th century—see s.v. discus in Dictionary of Medieval Latin from British Sources) and on the continent as discus (from the 12th or 13th century—see Mittellateinisches Wörternbuch); see desk.
Verb
Middle English disshen, verbal derivative of dysshdish entry 1
First Known Use
Noun
before the 12th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1a