kip
nounEtymology
From Middle English kippen, from Old Norse kippa (“to pull; snatch”) or Middle Dutch kippen (“to grasp, seize, catch”). Cognate with Norwegian kippe (“to snatch”), Swedish kippa (“to snatch; jerk”); Dutch kippen (“to seize; catch”). Perhaps conflated with some senses of Middle English kepen (“to keep, observe, guard, take possession of, snatch”) (see keep).
Definitions
The untanned hide of a young or small beast, such as a calf, lamb, or young goat.
A bundle or set of such hides.
A unit of count for skins, 30 for lamb and 50 for goat.
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The leather made from such hide.
- 'Stockings, madam? Shoes?' 'Yes, your Honor — both.' 'Yarn, perhaps? Morocco?' 'Yarn, your Honor. And kip.'
A place to sleep
A place to sleep; a rooming house; a bed.
Sleep, snooze, nap, forty winks, doze.
- I’m just going for my afternoon kip.
A very untidy house or room.
A brothel.
To sleep
To sleep; often with the connotation of a temporary or charitable situation, or one borne out of necessity.
- Don’t worry, I’ll kip on the sofabed.
- "Steady on, mate. How was I to know this was your gaff? I was lookin' for somewhere to kip."
- He took off his thick black coat and threw it to Harry. "You can kip under that," he said. "Don' mind it if wriggles a bit, I think I still got a couple o' dormice in one o' the pockets."
To snatch
To snatch; take up hastily; filch
To hold or keep (together)
To conduct oneself
To conduct oneself; act
A unit of force equal to 1000 pounds-force (lbf) (4.44822 kilonewtons or 4448.22 newtons)
A unit of force equal to 1000 pounds-force (lbf) (4.44822 kilonewtons or 4448.22 newtons); occasionally called the kilopound.
A unit of weight, used, for example, to calculate shipping charges, equal to half a US…
A unit of weight, used, for example, to calculate shipping charges, equal to half a US ton, or 1000 pounds.
A unit of mass equal to 1000 avoirdupois pounds.
The unit of currency in Laos, divided into 100 att, symbol ₭, abbreviation LAK.
A piece of flat wood used to throw the coins in a game of two-up.
- Again Turk placed the pennies on the kip. He took his time, deliberate over the small action, held the kip for a long breathless moment, then jerked his wrist and the pennies were in the air.
- Money was laid on the floor for bets on the heads or tails finish of two pennies tossed high into the air from a small wooden kip.
- Jack discarded a length of wood, two twists of wire, his two-up kip and a spanner.
A basic skill or maneuver in artistic gymnastics on the uneven bars, parallel bars, high…
A basic skill or maneuver in artistic gymnastics on the uneven bars, parallel bars, high bar and still rings used, for example, as a way of mounting the bar in a front support position, or achieving a handstand from a hanging position. In its basic form, the legs are swung forward and upward by bending the hips, then suddenly down again, which gives the upward impulse to the body.
A sharp-pointed hill
A sharp-pointed hill; a projecting point, as on a hill.
To perform the kip maneuver.
A diminutive of the male given name Kipling.
Initialism of kinetic impact round (baton round).
The neighborhood
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for kip. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA