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chipped in

 - 4 dictionary results

chip

1[chip] noun, verb, chipped, chip⋅ping.
–noun
1. a small, slender piece, as of wood, separated by chopping, cutting, or breaking.
2. a very thin slice or small piece of food, candy, etc.: chocolate chips.
3. a mark or flaw made by the breaking off or gouging out of a small piece: This glass has a chip.
4. any of the small round disks, usually of plastic or ivory, used as tokens for money in certain gambling games, as roulette or poker; counter.
5. Also called microchip. Electronics. a tiny slice of semiconducting material, generally in the shape of a square a few millimeters long, cut from a larger wafer of the material, on which a transistor or an entire integrated circuit is formed. Compare microprocessor.
6. a small cut or uncut piece of a diamond or crystal.
7. anything trivial or worthless.
8. something dried up or without flavor.
9. a piece of dried dung: buffalo chips.
10. wood, straw, etc., in thin strips for weaving into hats, baskets, etc.
11. Golf. chip shot.
12. Tennis. a softly sliced return shot with heavy backspin.
13. the strip of material removed by a recording stylus as it cuts the grooves in a record.
14. chips, Chiefly British. French fries.
–verb (used with object)
15. to hew or cut with an ax, chisel, etc.
16. to cut, break off, or gouge out (bits or fragments): He chipped a few pieces of ice from the large cube.
17. to disfigure by breaking off a fragment: to chip the edge of a saucer.
18. to shape or produce by cutting or flaking away pieces: to chip a figure out of wood.
19. Games. to bet by means of chips, as in poker.
20. Tennis. to slice (a ball) on a return shot, causing it to have heavy backspin.
21. Slang. to take (a narcotic drug) occasionally, esp. only in sufficient quantity to achieve a mild euphoria.
22. Chiefly British Sports. to hit or kick (a ball) a short distance forward.
23. British Slang. to jeer or criticize severely; deride; taunt.
24. Australian. to hoe; harrow.
–verb (used without object)
25. to break off in small pieces.
26. Golf. to make a chip shot.
27. chip in,
a. to contribute money or assistance; participate.
b. Games. to bet a chip or chips, as in poker.
c. to interrupt a conversation to say something; butt in: We all chipped in with our suggestions for the reunion.
28. chip off the old block, a person who resembles one parent in appearance or behavior: His son is just a chip off the old block.
29. chip on one's shoulder, a disposition to quarrel: You will never make friends if you go around with a chip on your shoulder.
30. in the chips, Slang. wealthy; rich: Don't look down on your old friends now that you're in the chips.
31. when the chips are down, in a discouraging or disadvantageous situation; in bad or pressing times: When the chips are down he proves to be a loyal friend.

Origin:
1300–50; (n.) ME chip (cf. OE cipp plowshare, beam, i.e., piece cut off); (v.) late ME chippen (cf. OE -cippian in forcippian to cut off); akin to MLG, MD kippen to chip eggs, hatch


chip⋅pa⋅ble, adjective
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2009.
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Slang Dictionary
chip

  1. n.
    a bargaining chip. : He used his inside info as a chip.
Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions by Richard A. Spears.Fourth Edition.
Copyright 2007. Published by McGraw Hill.
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Word Origin & History

chip  (v.)
O.E. forcippian "to pare away by cutting," v. form of cipp "small piece of wood," perhaps from PIE base *keipo- "sharp post" (cf. Du. kip "small strip of wood," L. cippus "post, stake, beam"). Sense of "break off fragments" is 18c. Noun meaning "counter used in a game of chance" is first recorded 1840. Electronics sense is from 1962. Meaning "piece of dried dung" first attested 1946. To chip in may come from card-playing. Potato chip is 1859. Chip of the old block is used by Milton (1642). To have a chip on one's shoulder is from at least 1820s, U.S., from the custom of a boy determined to fight putting a chip on his shoulder and defying another to knock it off. Chip in "contribute" is 1861, Amer.Eng.
Online Etymology Dictionary, © 2001 Douglas Harper
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Science Dictionary
chip   (chĭp)  Pronunciation Key 
See integrated circuit.
The American Heritage® Science Dictionary
Copyright © 2002. Published by Houghton Mifflin. All rights reserved.
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