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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
diss
verb
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ Just don't diss my little brother, OK?
▪ Politicians are always dissing football supporters.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ If you want to diss us, you got to cut it loose.
▪ Were all his posse pals going to diss him once word got out?
Wiktionary
diss

abbr. dissertation n. (context slang English) An insult or put-down; an expression of disrespect. vb. (context US British slang English) To put (someone) down, or show disrespect by the use of insulting language or dismissive behaviour.

WordNet
diss

v. treat, mention, or speak to rudely; "He insulted her with his rude remarks"; "the student who had betrayed his classmate was dissed by everyone" [syn: insult, affront]

Wikipedia
DISS

DISS ( Disability Information Services) is part of the Queen Elizabeth's Foundation for Disabled People (QEF), a charitable organisation based in Leatherhead, Surrey, England. The organisation has experience in producing databases of information relevant to the needs of disabled people, their families and carers, and has been successful in this field since the late 1980s.

Founded by QEF in 1989 as Disability Information Services Surrey, DISS was at first a telephone-based information resource for people living in Surrey to contact on an as-needed basis. Soon after its establishment, it became apparent that the vast amount of paper-based information needed to respond to telephone enquiries should ideally be computerised. Moreover, ever increasing Personal Computer power coupled with reducing PC costs enabled this computerisation to take place.

With these two factors in mind, DISS developed its own database of disability information for in-house use, which was subsequently named DissBASE. Using DissBASE, DISS workers could respond more quickly, and with a greater degree of accuracy, to inbound telephone enquiries. In these early days however, the majority of enquiries came from within the Surrey county border.

Over time, DissBASE comprised not only Surrey-specific information, but increasing amounts of national data, as well as more regional data from outside the county. In addition, other disability information and advice lines were being formed by local authorities, disability support groups and statutory bodies across the UK. With this in mind, and with DissBASE by this time comprising many thousands of records, DissBASE was made available to these other organisations nationwide. At around this time, and because of the more nationwide spread of the database, the "Surrey" part of the DISS name was dropped, although the second "S" is retained.

Over time, DISS ceased to be a telephone enquiry service in its own right; rather, it chose to specialise in those areas in which it had expertise, namely database systems development and data cleansing. These are still the main drivers behind DISS to this day.

Usage examples of "diss".

She had worked with enough vets to w these were no ordinary memories that could be dissed with a mental shift of direction.

Bad enough Blayne’s dissing my studliness, the last thing I need is everyone hearing me talk about attractive men.

He disses you, you diss him, and the next thing you know, one of you’ll be standing in front of a judge trying to explain how the other deserved to get shot or stabbed.

All those years the pervert was dissed, and not nominated for the homecoming court, and not worshiped, and not wanted.

The sensational courtroom drama of the caped crusaders sitting on the front row, while the joker of the judge dissed them, bristled over the airwaves.

Instead of getting dissed and threatened by dealers and gangs, who had MAC-10s, he got dissed and threatened by the Aryan Brotherhood, who had clubs and shivs.

In homeroom this morning, f told Sara all about how I'd dissed Miss Hyacinth Anastasia Wallace on the phone.