Dish, when used as a noun, means "dish, dish, bowl", usually a deep oval dish, usually placed in the center of the dining table. Dish can also be a "dish".
When Dish is used to explain "tableware", it is always in the plural and often preceded by the.
Dish can also mean "attractive person" and "beautiful person" in spoken language.
Dish, when used as a verb, means "served on a plate" and is often used in the idiom dish? Go out for dinner? Up. In spoken English, Dish can also mean "destroy someone's hope", "destroy someone's opportunity" and "make someone unable to succeed". Dish is used as a transitive verb and can be used in the passive structure.
The same root phrase:
Washing dishes? wash the bowl up
Clear the dishes? Clean up the dishes
Do the dishes? wash up
Have you had a meal? bite
Have you had a meal? bite
Order a dish? order dishes
Stack the plates? Fold the plates.
Prepare dishes? cook
Choose a dish? Order, choose a dish
Serve? Supply food
Do the dishes? wash the bowl up