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Webster 1913 Edition
Pip
Pip
,Pip
,Pip
,Webster 1828 Edition
Pip
PIP
,PIP
,Definition 2024
Pip
Pip
English
Proper noun
Pip
- A diminutive form of the given names Philip, Phillip, and Philippa.
- 1861 Charles Dickens, Great Expectations, Chapter 1:
- My father’s family name being Pirrip, and my Christian name Philip, my infant tongue could make of both names nothing longer or more explicit than Pip. So, I called myself Pip, and came to be called Pip.
- 1861 Charles Dickens, Great Expectations, Chapter 1:
Anagrams
pip
pip
English
Noun
pip (plural pips)
- Any of various respiratory diseases in birds, especially infectious coryza. [from the 15th c.]
- (humorous) Of humans, a disease, malaise or depression.
- D. H. Lawrence, letter to Edward Garnett
- I've got the pip horribly at present.
- 1960, P. G. Wodehouse, Jeeves in the Offing, chapter IV:
- With this deal Uncle Tom's got on with Homer Cream, it would be fatal to risk giving [Mrs Cream] the pip in any way.
- D. H. Lawrence, letter to Edward Garnett
Derived terms
Etymology 2
Apparently representing a shortened form of pippin, from Middle English pipin, from Old French pepin (“a seed”) (French pépin).
Noun
pip (plural pips)
- (obsolete) A pippin.
- (Britain) A seed inside certain fleshy fruits (compare stone/pit), such as a peach, orange, or apple.
- (US, colloquial) Something or someone excellent, of high quality.
- 2006, Thomas Pynchon, Against the Day, Vintage 2007, p. 612:
- She sure is a pip, that one. You need company?
- 2006, Thomas Pynchon, Against the Day, Vintage 2007, p. 612:
- (Britain, dated, WW I, signalese) P in RAF phonetic alphabet
Derived terms
Translations
Etymology 3
Origin uncertain, perhaps related to Etymology 2, above.
Noun
pip (plural pips)
- One of the spots or symbols on a playing card, domino, die, etc.
- (military, public service) One of the stars worn on the shoulder of a uniform to denote rank, e.g. of a soldier or a fireman.
- A spot; a speck.
- A spot of light or an inverted V indicative of a return of radar waves reflected from an object; a blip.
- A piece of rhizome with a dormant shoot of the lily of the valley plant, used for propagation
Synonyms
- (symbol on playing card etc): spot
Translations
Verb
pip (third-person singular simple present pips, present participle pipping, simple past and past participle pipped)
- To get the better of; to defeat by a narrow margin
- He led throughout the race but was pipped at the post.
- To hit with a gunshot
- The hunter managed to pip three ducks from his blind.
Etymology 4
Imitative.
Verb
pip (third-person singular simple present pips, present participle pipping, simple past and past participle pipped)
- To peep, to chirp
- (avian biology) To make the initial hole during the process of hatching from an egg
Etymology 5
Imitative.
Noun
pip (plural pips)
Examples |
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- One of a series of very short, electronically produced tones, used, for example, to count down the final few seconds before a given time or to indicate that a caller using a payphone needs to make further payment if he is to continue his call.
- 1982 John Banville, The Newton Letter
- I could clearly hear the frequent cataclysms of the upstairs lavatory, and my day began with the pips for the morning news in Charlotte Lawless's kitchen.
- 1982 John Banville, The Newton Letter
Synonyms
- (electronic sound, counting down seconds): stroke
Translations
Etymology 6
Abbreviation of percentage in point.
Noun
pip (plural pips)
- (finance, currency trading) The smallest price increment between two currencies in foreign exchange (forex) trading.
- 2012, Abe Cofnas, The Forex Trading Course
- The set-and-forget trader is playing fundamental direction and is seeking very large moves of 150 to 300 pips.
- 2012, Abe Cofnas, The Forex Trading Course
Related terms
- pip to the post
- pip at the post
- pipsqueak
- give the pip to, give someone the pip
Anagrams
Albanian
Etymology 1
A descriptive term, similar to German piepen and Latin pipīre.
Verb
pip (first-person singular past tense pipa, participle pipur)
Etymology 2
From Romance *pīpa, also present in Old French pipe, Italian pipa etc.
Noun
pip f (indefinite plural pipa, definite singular pipa, definite plural pipat)
Danish
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /pip/, [pʰib̥]
Noun
pip n (singular definite pippet, plural indefinite pip)
Inflection
Noun
pip n
Dutch
Etymology
From Middle Dutch pip (“disease of poultry, also of people”), from post-classical Latin pipita, from Latin pītuīta (“slime, head cold”).
Noun
pip m (uncountable)
- Pip (any of various respiratory diseases in birds, especially infectious coryza).
- (humorous or colloquial) Of humans, a disease (particularly the common cold or the flu), malaise or depression.
Derived terms
- pips
- de pip krijgen