DSL is basically creating your own small sublanguage to solve a specific domain problem. This is solved using method chaining. Languages where dots and parentheses are optional help make these expression seem more natural. It can also be similar to a builder pattern.
DSL aren't languages themselves, but rather a pattern that you apply to your API to make the calls be more self explanatory.
One example is Guice,
has some description further down of how interfaces are bound to implementations, and in what contexts.
Another common example is for query languages. For example:
NewsDAO.writtenBy("someUser").before("someDate").updateStatus("Deleted")
In the implementation, imagine each method returning either a new Query object, or just this updating itself internally. At any point you can terminate the chain by using for example rows() to get all the rows, or updateSomeField as I have done above here. Both will return a result object.
I would recommend taking a look at the Guice example above as well, as each call there returns a new type with new options on them. A good IDE will allow you to complete, making it clear which options you have at each point.
Edit: seems many consider DSLs as new, simple, single purpose languages with their own parsers. I always associate DSL as using method chaining as a convention to express operations.