: to cultivate with an implement (such as a harrow or plow) that turns and loosens the soil with a series of discs
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Noun
Some of these scientists are drilling deep into melting glaciers to save ancient ice cores; others are encoding human languages onto metal disks and launching them into space — small acts of hope left behind for someone (someday) to discover.—Big Think, 13 Nov. 2025 Time Machine automatically backs up your files to an external drive or network disk, keeping your data safe from ransomware, hardware failure or accidental deletion.—Kurt Knutsson, FOXNews.com, 13 Nov. 2025 One person suffered a spinal disk herniation, and another had an increase in enzymes that could signal liver damage, but those levels resolved within two weeks.—Sandee Lamotte, CNN Money, 8 Nov. 2025 By mapping so many Cepheids in the galactic plane, the scientists were able to trace the overall shape of the Milky Way’s disk, and the warping really stands out.—Phil Plait, Scientific American, 6 Nov. 2025 See All Example Sentences for disk
Word History
Etymology
Noun
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
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