a flat piece of metal, often a disk but sometimes a cross, star, or other form, usually bearing an inscription or design, issued to commemorate a person, action, or event, or given as a reward for bravery, merit, or the like: a gold medal for the best swimmer.
2.
a similar object bearing a religious image, as of a saint: a Saint Christopher's medal.
–verb (used with object)
3.
to decorate or honor with a medal.
–verb (used without object)
4.
to receive a medal, esp. in a sporting event: He medaled in three of four races.
Origin: 1580–90; earlier medaille < MF < It medaglia copper coin worth a halfpenny < VL *medalia, var. (by dissimilation) of LL mediālia, n. use of neut. pl. (taken as fem. sing.) of mediālismedial
A flat piece of metal stamped with a design or an inscription commemorating an event or a person, often given as an award.
A piece of metal stamped with a religious device, used as an object of veneration or commemoration.
v.
med·aled also med·alled, med·al·ing also med·al·ling, med·als also med·alsInformal
v.
intr. To win a medal, as in a sports contest: "We were the first Americans to medal"(Jill Watson). v.
tr. To award a medal to.
[French médaille, from Old French, from Italian medaglia, coin worth half a denarius, medal, from Vulgar Latin *medālia, coins worth half a denarius, from Late Latin mediālia, little halves, from neuter pl. of mediālis, of the middle, medial; see medial.] me·dal'lic (mə-dāl'ĭk) adj.