Mash in a sentence as a noun

Well, it is fair if all you want to do is mash some data together.

The mash on top was really creamy and the mince was in lovely gravy.

And, as often as not, it's the thought of "What happens when I mash these things together?

Load it up, mash it into shape with high-level functions, then quickly produce great-looking graphics.

WordPress' Dashboard often looks like a wasteland once a few plugins have been installed – a mish-mash of "Upgrade to the PRO version!

Other Linux distributions look like a mish-mash of a bunch of different designs by many different people.

Mash in a sentence as a verb

The software consists of a mash-up of legacy stuff incorporated into generally very "safe" architecture choices.

[...] Removing the latency, one of the cases that I've been making that shows the ridiculousness of it all, where, I can measure 50ms of delay on this, and I do that by, I have a program that switches colors when I hit a button, and you put a high-speed camera here, you mash it, and you wait, you count frames until it switches, and it's 50ms for that over a very fast display.

Green College has students from a wide variety of disciplines, and discussions accompanying the meal were a general mash of ideas far outside what I would ever encounter when hanging around my school's CS labs.

I don't get input select though, just "next in cycle", which I can't just mash 4 times to go around because it has to sync and show me what is on the inputs I don't want to watch before I can move forward again.• Infrared remotes?

I agree with a lot of the comments that say you can't get much done; it's mostly a case of connecting existing libraries and data sources to create a sort of 'mash-up'.That said, being able to prototype quickly is an awesome skill, and it completely exercises different parts of my skillset than my normal job. Going from coding a large C application, to hacking together a Ruby app is a very refreshing experience.

Mash definitions

noun

a mixture of mashed malt grains and hot water; used in brewing

noun

mixture of ground animal feeds

verb

to compress with violence, out of natural shape or condition; "crush an aluminum can"; "squeeze a lemon"

See also: squash crush squelch squeeze

verb

talk or behave amorously, without serious intentions; "The guys always try to chat up the new secretaries"; "My husband never flirts with other women"

See also: flirt dally butterfly coquet coquette romance philander

verb

reduce to small pieces or particles by pounding or abrading; "grind the spices in a mortar"; "mash the garlic"

See also: grind crunch bray comminute