| 1. | an open, relatively shallow container of pottery, glass, metal, wood, etc., used for various purposes, esp. for holding or serving food. |
| 2. | any container used at table: dirty dishes. |
| 3. | the food served or contained in a dish: The meal consisted of several dishes. |
| 4. | a particular article, type, or preparation of food: Rice is an inexpensive dish. |
| 5. | the quantity held by a dish; dishful: a dish of applesauce. |
| 6. | anything like a dish in form or use. |
| 7. | concavity or the degree of concavity, as of a wheel. |
| 8. | Also called dish antenna. a concave, dish-shaped reflector serving to focus electromagnetic energy as part of a transmitter or receiver of radio, television, or microwave signals. |
| 9. | Slang: Sometimes Offensive. an attractive girl or woman: The receptionist is quite a dish. |
| 10. | Slang. an item of gossip. |
| 11. | to put into or serve in a dish, as food: to dish food onto plates. |
| 12. | to fashion like a dish; make concave. |
| 13. | Slang. to gossip about: They talked all night, dishing their former friends. |
| 14. | Slang. to defeat; frustrate; cheat. |
| 15. | Slang. to talk together informally, esp., to gossip. |
| 16. | dish out, Informal.
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| 17. | dish it out, Informal. to dispense abusive language, punishment, or praise, enthusiastic approval, etc.: When it comes to flattery, he can really dish it out. |
dish
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dish (sth)
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Dish
for eating from (2 Kings 21:13). Judas dipped his hand with a "sop" or piece of bread in the same dish with our Lord, thereby indicating friendly intimacy (Matt. 26:23). The "lordly dish" in Judg. 5:25 was probably the shallow drinking cup, usually of brass. In Judg. 6:38 the same Hebrew word is rendered "bowl." The dishes of the tabernacle were made of pure gold (Ex. 25:29; 37:16).
dish
In addition to the idioms beginning with dish, also see do the dishes. Also see under dishwater.
| DISH diffuse idiopathic skeletal hyperostosis |