| 1. | to crush: He mashed his thumb with a hammer. |
| 2. | to reduce to a soft, pulpy mass, as by beating or pressure, esp. in the preparation of food. |
| 3. | to mix (crushed malt or meal of grain) with hot water to form wort. |
| 4. | a soft, pulpy mass. |
| 5. | a pulpy condition. |
| 6. | a mixture of boiled grain, bran, meal, etc., fed warm to horses and cattle. |
| 7. | crushed malt or meal of grain mixed with hot water to form wort. |
| 8. | British Slang. mashed potatoes. |

mash (māsh) n.
[Middle English mash- (as in mashfat, mash tub), from Old English *māsc, *mǣsc, māx- (in māxwyrt, wort); see meik- in Indo-European roots. V., sense 5, perhaps from Romany mash, to entice.] |
A film and later a television series about the staff of a battlefield hospital during the Korean War; M*A*S*H is an acronym for “mobile army surgical hospital.” The film and the television program offered humor and serious observations about politics, love, friendship, and war.
mash
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MASH abbr.
Mobile Army Surgical Hospital
Mash
(= Meshech 1 Chr. 1:17), one of the four sons of Aram, and the name of a tribe descended from him (Gen. 10:23) inhabiting some part probably of Mesopotamia. Some have supposed that they were the inhabitants of Mount Masius, the present Karja Baghlar, which forms part of the chain of Taurus.
| MASH Mobile Army Surgical Hospital |