: 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
Kalas first started searching for a dusty disk around Fomalhaut in 1993, hoping to see for the first time the debris left over after planet formation.—Prabhat Ranjan Mishra, Interesting Engineering, 20 Dec. 2025 In the second scenario, a rapidly spinning star undergoes a supernova explosion, but the resulting neutron star is surrounded by a disk of material that then gathers to form another neutron star, in a way similar to how planets form around infant stars.—Robert Lea, Space.com, 19 Dec. 2025 All-Clad’s innovation was to envelop a disk of highly conductive aluminum in nearly indestructible stainless steel, creating a surface that heats more evenly and can stand up to high temps and general kitchen abuse.—Jesse Raub, Bon Appetit Magazine, 18 Dec. 2025 The stone disks enclosed in a twisted wire structure are held in place by leaf designs with similar petals to the Love in Verona collections.—Fairchild Studio, Footwear News, 10 Dec. 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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