clip

English

Pronunciation

  • enPR: klĭp, IPA(key): /klɪp/
  • (file)
  • Rhymes: -ɪp

Etymology 1

From Middle English cleppen, cluppen, clippen, from Old English clyppan, from Proto-Germanic *klupjaną.

Verb

clip (third-person singular simple present clips, present participle clipping, simple past and past participle clipped)

  1. To grip tightly.
  2. To fasten with a clip.
    Please clip the photos to the pages where they will go.
  3. (archaic) To hug, embrace.
    • Shakespeare
      O [] that Neptune's arms, who clippeth thee about, / Would bear thee from the knowledge of thyself.
    • 1749, [John Cleland], Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure [Fanny Hill], London: Printed [by Thomas Parker] for G. Fenton [i.e., Fenton and Ralph Griffiths] [], OCLC 731622352:
      When we had sufficiently graduated our advances towards the main point, by toying, kissing, clipping, feeling my breasts, now round and plump, feeling that part of me I might call a furnace-mouth, from the prodigious intense heat his fiery touches had rekindled there, my young sportsman, embolden'd by every freedom he could wish, wantonly takes my hand, and carries it to that enormous machine of his
  4. (slang) To collect signatures, generally with the use of a clipboard.
Translations

Noun

(4) Magazine

clip (plural clips)

  1. Something which clips or grasps; a device for attaching one object to another.
    Use this clip to attach the check to your tax form.
  2. An unspecified but normally understood as rapid speed or pace.
    She reads at a pretty good clip.
    He was walking at a fair clip and I was out of breath trying to keep up.
  3. (obsolete) An embrace.
    (Can we find and add a quotation of Sir Philip Sidney to this entry?)
  4. A frame containing a number of bullets which is intended to be inserted into the magazine of a firearm to allow for rapid reloading.
  5. A projecting flange on the upper edge of a horseshoe, turned up so as to embrace the lower part of the hoof; a toe clip or beak.
    (Can we find and add a quotation of Youatt to this entry?)
  6. (fishing, Britain, Scotland) A gaff or hook for landing the fish, as in salmon fishing.
Derived terms
Terms derived from clip (noun)
Translations

Etymology 2

Probably from Old Norse klippa.

Verb

clip (third-person singular simple present clips, present participle clipping, simple past and past participle clipt or clipped)

  1. To cut, especially with scissors or shears as opposed to a knife etc.
    She clipped my hair with her scissors.
    Please clip that coupon out of the newspaper.
    • Macaulay
      sentenced to have his ears clipped
  2. To curtail; to cut short.
    • Shakespeare
      All my reports go with the modest truth; / No more nor clipped, but so.
    • Jonathan Swift
      In London they clip their words after one manner about the court, another in the city, and a third in the suburbs.
  3. (dialectal, informal) To strike with the hand.
    I'll clip ye round the lugs!
  4. To hit or strike, especially in passing.
     
    The car skidded off the road and clipped a lamppost.
  5. (American football) An illegal tackle: Throwing the body across the back of an opponent's leg or hitting him from the back below the waist while moving up from behind unless the opponent is a runner or the action is in close line play.
  6. (signal processing) To cut off a signal level at a certain maximum value.
  7. (computer graphics) To discard (an occluded part of a model or scene) rather than waste resources on rendering it.
  8. (computer graphics, transitive, intransitive) (Of a camera, character model, etc.) To move (through or into) (a rendered object or barrier).
    The camera keeps clipping that ceiling.
    Clipping through walls is integral to the game's speedruns.
    1. (computer graphics, ergative) To move the camera, a character model, or another object (through or into a rendered object or barrier).
      Oh, no, I clipped my avatar through the barrier!
  9. To cheat, swindle, or fleece.
Derived terms
Translations

Noun

clip (countable and uncountable, plural clips)

  1. Something which has been clipped from a larger whole:
    1. The product of a single shearing of sheep.
    2. A season's crop of wool.
    3. A section of video taken from a film, broadcast, or other longer video
      The morning news today played a clip of last night's debate.
      The 100th episode of Seinfeld consisted of clips from previous episodes.
    4. A newspaper clipping.
  2. An act of clipping, such as a haircut.
    I went into the salon to get a clip.
  3. (uncountable, Geordie) The condition of something, its state.
    Deeky the clip of that aad wife ower thor!
  4. (informal) A blow with the hand (often in the set phrase clip round the ear)
    Give him a clip round the ear!
Derived terms
Translations

References

  • The New Geordie Dictionary, Frank Graham, 1987, →ISBN
  • National Football League (2007). Official Rules of the National Football League 2007. Triumph Books.

Anagrams


French

Etymology

Borrowed from English clip.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /klip/

Noun

clip m (plural clips)

  1. music video
  2. clip-on (earring)

Derived terms

Further reading


Irish

Etymology

Verb

clip (present analytic clipeann, future analytic clipfidh, verbal noun clipeadh, past participle clipthe)

  1. (transitive) prick; tease, torment
  2. (transitive) tire, wear, out

Conjugation

Derived terms

  • clipire m (teaser, tormentor)
  • cliptheach (prickly; teasing, tormenting, adjective)

Mutation

Irish mutation
Radical Lenition Eclipsis
clip chlip gclip
Note: Some of these forms may be hypothetical. Not every possible mutated form of every word actually occurs.

Further reading

  • "clip" in Foclóir Gaeilge-Béarla, An Gúm, 1977, by Niall Ó Dónaill.
  • Entries containing “clip” in English-Irish Dictionary, An Gúm, 1959, by Tomás de Bhaldraithe.
  • Entries containing “clip” in New English-Irish Dictionary by Foras na Gaeilge.

Italian

Etymology

Borrowed from English clip.

Noun

clip m (invariable)

  1. clip
  2. paper clip

Spanish

Etymology

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈklib/, [ˈkliβ]

Noun

clip m (plural clips)

  1. paper clip
    Synonym: sujetapapeles
  2. clip (something which clips or grasps; a device for attaching one object to another.)
  3. clip (a frame containing a number of bullets which is intended to be inserted into the magazine of a firearm to allow for rapid reloading.)
    Synonym: fragmento
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.