drip
Definition from Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Contents
English[edit]
Pronunciation[edit]
Etymology[edit]
From Old English dryppan, from Proto-Germanic *drupjaną. Akin to Norwegian Bokmål dryppe, Norwegian Nynorsk drypa.
Verb[edit]
drip (third-person singular simple present drips, present participle dripping, simple past and past participle dripped)
- (intransitive) To fall one drop at a time.
-
Listening to the tap next door drip all night drove me mad!
-
- (intransitive) To leak slowly.
-
Does the sink drip, or have I just spilt water over the floor?
-
- (transitive) To let fall in drops.
-
After putting oil on the side of the salad, the chef should drip a little vinegar in the oil.
-
My broken pen dripped ink onto the table.
- Jonathan Swift
- Which from the thatch drips fast a shower of rain.
-
1913, Joseph C. Lincoln, chapter 8, in Mr. Pratt's Patients:
- Philander went into the next room […] and came back with a salt mackerel that dripped brine like a rainstorm. Then he put the coffee pot on the stove and rummaged out a loaf of dry bread and some hardtack.
-
- (intransitive, usually with with) To have a superabundance of valuable things.
-
The Old Hall simply drips with masterpieces of the Flemish painters.
-
The duchess was dripping with jewels.
-
- (intransitive, of the weather) To rain lightly.
-
The weather isn't so bad. I mean, it's dripping, but you're not going to get so wet.
-
- (intransitive) To be wet, to be soaked.
Derived terms[edit]
Translations[edit]
to fall one drop at a time
|
|
to leak slowly
to put a small amount of a liquid on something, drop by drop
Noun[edit]
drip (plural drips)
- A drop of a liquid.
- I put a drip of vanilla extract in my hot cocoa.
- (medicine) An apparatus that slowly releases a liquid, especially one that releases drugs into a patient's bloodstream (an intravenous drip).
- He's not doing so well. The doctors have put him on a drip.
- (colloquial) A limp, ineffectual, boring or otherwise uninteresting person.
- He couldn't even summon up the courage to ask her name... what a drip!
- A falling or letting fall in drops; act of dripping.
- Byron
- the light drip of the suspended oar
- Byron
- (architecture) That part of a cornice, sill course, or other horizontal member, which projects beyond the rest, and has a section designed to throw off rainwater.
Derived terms[edit]
Translations[edit]
a drop of a liquid
|
|
a boring or otherwise uninteresting person
an apparatus that slowly releases a liquid
Acronym[edit]
drip
Translations[edit]
Dividend Reinvestment Program
|
Categories:
- English 1-syllable words
- English terms with IPA pronunciation
- English terms inherited from Old English
- English terms derived from Old English
- English terms inherited from Proto-Germanic
- English terms derived from Proto-Germanic
- English lemmas
- English verbs
- English intransitive verbs
- English terms with usage examples
- English transitive verbs
- English nouns
- English countable nouns
- en:Medicine
- English colloquialisms
- en:Architecture
- English acronyms
- en:Finance
- en:Liquids