dishing 凹陷
形成凹面
辐板压弯
平底器皿下沉变形
大半径凹进成形
Dish \Dish\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Dished}; p. pr. & vb. n.
{Dishing}.]
1. To put in a dish, ready for the table.
2. To make concave, or depress in the middle, like a dish;
as, to dish a wheel by inclining the spokes.
3. To frustrate; to beat; to ruin. [Low]
4. to talk about (a person) in a disparaging manner; to
gossip about (a person); as, the secretaries spent their
break time dishing the newest employee. [slang]
[PJC]
{To dish out}.
1. To serve out of a dish; to distribute in portions at
table.
2. (Arch.) To hollow out, as a gutter in stone or wood.
2. to dispense freely; -- also used figuratively; as, to dish
out punishment; to dish out abuse or insult.
{To dish up}, to take (food) from the oven, pots, etc., and
put in dishes to be served at table.
Dishing \Dish"ing\, a.
Dish-shaped; concave.
- Once you start dishing on sex and kids and money, anything is possible.
- Despite the longest economic expansion in postwar America, the nation's soup kitchens seem busier than ever, dishing out not just hash but everything from counseling to day care.
- The judges reported that they are fighting back by increasingly dishing out sanctions against offending attorneys or their clients for bringing a frivolous lawsuit, motion or defense.
- By all accounts, Mr. Posner has been fufilling his penance to the letter, including long sessions dishing up food in a downtown soup kitchen.
- What's more, marketers aren't dishing up any hot new ethnic foods or new products with special nutritional claims.
- It won't just be a means of dishing out money-off coupons.
- I suppose he was doling out my money - dishing out verbal promissory notes. It seemed to work.
- Because it's pledge season, public TV is dishing out oodles of musical nostalgia.