dished

Etymology

verb

  1. simple past and past participle of dish

adj

  1. Shaped like a dish; concave.
    Bicycle and cart wheels are often dished.
  2. (archaic, colloquial) Defeated, exhausted.
    Getting tired, however, of this idol-worship, Lord Arthur gives out that he is ‘dished;’ and his worshippers depart from him as fast as they came. 1835 July, “[Review of Plantagenet]”, in The Westminster Review, volume 23, number 45, page 105
    I fear I am clean dished. The Heads of Houses are at this very moment concocting a manifesto against me. 12 March 1841, John Henry Newman, “[Letter to Harriet Mozley]”, in Anne Mozley, editor, Letters and Correspondence of John Henry Newman During His Life in the English Church[…], volume 2, published 1890, page 292
    I have been in splendid health, and was getting quite fat till within the last few days, when I caught cold on the stupid Rhine […] and just now I am very ‘dished’ indeed. 4 June 1845, Geraldine Jewsbury, “[Letter to Jane Welsh Carlyle]”, in Anne Ireland, editor, Selections from the Letters of Geraldine Endsor Jewsbury to Jane Welsh Carlyle, published 1892, pages 161–2

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