disc - Wiktionary, the free dictionary (original) (raw)
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
- disk (chiefly US or for magnetic media [See disk § Usage notes])
From French disque, from Latin discus, from Ancient Greek δίσκος (dískos, “disk, quoit, platter”). Doublet of dais, desk, discus, dish, disk, and diskos.
disc (plural discs)
- A thin, flat, circular plate or similar object.
A coin is a disc of metal. - (anatomy) An intervertebral disc.
- Something resembling a disc.
Venus's disc cut off light from the Sun.- 1898, H.G. Wells, The War of the Worlds, London: William Heinemann, page 300:
[A] peculiar luminous and sinuous marking appeared on the unillumined half of the inner planet, and almost simultaneously a faint dark mark of a similar sinuous character was detected upon a photograph of the Martian disc.
- 1898, H.G. Wells, The War of the Worlds, London: William Heinemann, page 300:
- A vinyl phonograph or gramophone record.
Turn the disc over, after it has finished. - (botany) The flat surface of an organ, as a leaf, any flat, round growth.
- (disc sports) Ellipsis of flying disc; synonym of frisbee; generic name for the trademark Frisbee.
- Alternative form of disk
See usage notes at the disk entry.
disc (third-person singular simple present discs, present participle discing, simple past and past participle disced)
- (agriculture) To harrow with a disc harrow.
- 1901 October 11, “Discing Lucerne”, in The Agricultural Journal and Mining Record[1], volume 4, number 16, page 488:
It is held that discing is as much value to lucerne as cultivation is to corn.
- 1901 October 11, “Discing Lucerne”, in The Agricultural Journal and Mining Record[1], volume 4, number 16, page 488:
- (aviation, of a propeller) To move towards, or operate at, zero blade pitch, orienting the propeller blades face-on to the oncoming airflow and maximizing the drag generated by the propeller.
In the air, the asymmetric drag generated by a discing propeller can result in loss of control of the airplane.
Borrowed from Latin discus, originally from Ancient Greek δίσκος (dískos, “disk, quoit, platter”).
disc m (plural discs or discos)
“disc”, in Diccionari de la llengua catalana [Dictionary of the Catalan Language] (in Catalan), second edition, Institute of Catalan Studies [Catalan: Institut d'Estudis Catalans], April 2007
From Proto-West Germanic *disk, from Latin discus, originally from Ancient Greek δίσκος (dískos, “disk, quoit, platter”).
disċ m
Strong _a_-stem:
disc m
- alternative spelling of disk
Borrowed from French disque, from Latin discus, from Ancient Greek δίσκος (dískos, “disk, quoit, platter”).
disc n (plural discuri)
Borrowed from Greek δίσκος (dískos), partly through a Slavic intermediate.
disc n (plural discuri)
- dish (flat round object), especially one used in church services to collect money