Hello, you have come here looking for the meaning of the word lip. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word lip, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say lip in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word lip you have here. The definition of the word lip will help you to be more precise and correct when speaking or writing your texts. Knowing the definition oflip, as well as those of other words, enriches your vocabulary and provides you with more and better linguistic resources.
The cork sails over the garden wall and lands somewhere no one can see it. A crest of white spills over the lip of the bottle and Niall pours the wine into Elaine's glass.
Loose Tomato grew up tough. No one ever suspected that he was scared every time he walked down the street. Any lip and they got their ass kicked.
The edge of a high spot of land.
1894, David Livingstone, “Chapter VII”, in A Popular Account of Dr Livingstone's Expedition to the Zambesi and its Tributaries:
We landed at the head of Garden Island, which is situated near the middle of the river and on the lip of the Falls. On reaching that lip, and peering over the giddy height, the wondrous and unique character of the magnificent cascade at once burst upon us.
They toiled forward along a tiny path on the river’s lip. Suddenly it vanished. The bank was sheer red solid clay in front of them, sloping straight into the river.
1999, Harish Kapadia, “Ascents in the Panch Chuli Group”, in Across Peaks & Passes in Kumaun Himalaya, New Delhi: Indus Publishing Company, →ISBN, page 136:
Looking to the east we could see Api and the mountains of west Nepal, shapely snow peaks in the distance, while in the immediate foreground, much lower but still dramatic, were the peaks of Panch Chuli IV and V (III was hidden by the lip of a huge cornice), Telkot and Nagling, all of them unclimbed, all steep and challenging.
The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.
Our love was like the bright snow-flakes, Which melt before you pass, Or the bubble on the wine which breaks Before you lip the glass;
1901, Robert W. Chambers, chapter 9, in Cardigan, New York: Harper, published 1902, page 130:
Once […] at dawn, I heard a bull-moose lipping tree-buds, and lay still in my blanket while the huge beast wandered past, crack! crash! and slop! slop!through the creek […]
It was very soothing and restful up there on the saloon deck, with no sound but the gentle lipping of the water as it rippled against the sides of the steamer.
1922, John Masefield, The Dream, London: Heinemann, page 9:
So on I went, and by my side, it seemed, Paced a great bull, kept from me by a brook Which lipped the grass about it as it streamed Over the flagroots that the grayling shook;
2008, Julie Czerneda, Riders of the Storm, New York: Daw Books, Interlude, page 406:
The mist that lipped against the wall behind him hung overhead like a ceiling, hiding any stars.
1903, Robert Barr, Over the Border, London: Isbister, Book 4, Chapter 7, p. 375:
Below, the swollen Eden, lipping full from bank to bank, rolled yellow and surly to the sea.
1911, Charles G. D. Roberts, “Mothers of the North”, in Neighbors Unknown, U.S. edition, New York: Macmillan, page 256:
The rest of the herd were grouped so close to the water’s edge that from time to time a lazy, leaden-green swell would come lipping up and splash them.
Above the spring the little statue of the god Myrddin, he of the winged spaces of the air, stared from between the ferns. Beneath his cracked wooden feet the water bubbled and dripped into the stone basin, lipping over into the grass below.
1894, Fiona Macleod, chapter 4, in Pharais, Derby, page 88:
[…] old Macrae, of Adrfeulan Farm near by, had caused rude steps to be cut in the funnel-like hollow rising sheer up from the sloping ledge that lipped the chasm and reached the summit of the scaur.
“I shall find the ball to the left of a patch of sword grass near the hole,” he said. “My second will lip the hole, I know it as well as if I could see the whole thing.”
1999, J. M. Gregson, chapter 9, in Malice Aforethough, Sutton: Severn House, page 112:
Lambert just missed his three; his putt lipped the hole before finishing two feet past it.
1989, Buk Baibel long Tok Pisin, Port Moresby: Bible Society of Papua New Guinea, Jenesis1:30:
Tasol mi givim ol grinpela lip na gras samting olsem kaikai bilong olgeta bikpela na liklik animal na bilong olgeta pisin.” Orait ol dispela samting i kamap olsem God i tok.