: 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
Repeat process with remaining dough disk.—Alana Al-Hatlani, Southern Living, 29 Nov. 2025 These vast basaltic plains formed billions of years ago when masses of lava flooded ancient impact craters, before hardening to resurface swathes of the Earth-facing lunar disk.—Anthony Wood, Space.com, 27 Nov. 2025 In other words, the heat emanating off of the early Earth creates a chemical gradient within the disk, leading to a differing composition for the side of the Moon that’s closer to Earth versus the side farther from Earth.—Big Think, 26 Nov. 2025 Vitamix’s 12-Cup Food Processor Attachment includes a multi-use blade for chopping, mincing, and kneading dough; a small disk for fine shredding and thin slicing; and a large disk for coarser shredding and thick slicing.—Mark Marino, Bon Appetit Magazine, 25 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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