verb, dipped or (Archaic
) dipt; dip⋅ping; noun | 1. | to plunge (something, as a cloth or sponge) temporarily into a liquid, so as to moisten it, dye it, or cause it to take up some of the liquid: He dipped the brush into the paint bucket. |
| 2. | to raise or take up by a bailing, scooping, or ladling action: to dip water out of a boat; to dip ice cream from a container. |
| 3. | to lower and raise: to dip a flag in salutation. |
| 4. | to immerse (a sheep, hog, etc.) in a solution to destroy germs, parasites, or the like. |
| 5. | to make (a candle) by repeatedly plunging a wick into melted tallow or wax. |
| 6. | Nautical. to lower and rehoist (a yard of a lugsail) when coming about in tacking. |
| 7. | Archaic. to baptize by immersion. |
| 8. | Obsolete. to moisten or wet as if by immersion. |
| 9. | to plunge into water or other liquid and emerge quickly: The boat dipped into the waves. |
| 10. | to put the hand, a dipper, etc., down into a liquid or a container, esp. in order to remove something (often fol. by in or into): He dipped into the jar for an olive. |
| 11. | to withdraw something, esp. in small amounts (usually fol. by in or into): to dip into savings. |
| 12. | to sink or drop down: The sun dipped below the horizon. |
| 13. | to incline or slope downward: At that point the road dips into a valley. |
| 14. | to decrease slightly or temporarily: Stock-market prices often dip on Fridays. |
| 15. | to engage slightly in a subject (often fol. by in or into): to dip into astronomy. |
| 16. | to read here and there in a book, subject, or author's work (often fol. by in or into): to dip into Plato. |
| 17. | South Midland and Southern U.S. to take snuff. |
| 18. | the act of dipping. |
| 19. | that which is taken up by dipping. |
| 20. | a quantity taken up by dipping; the amount that a scoop, ladle, dipper, etc., will hold. |
| 21. | a scoop of ice cream. |
| 22. | Chiefly Northern U.S. a liquid or soft substance into which something is dipped. |
| 23. | a creamy mixture of savory foods for scooping with potato chips, crackers, and the like, often served as an hors d'oeuvre, esp. with cocktails. |
| 24. | a momentary lowering; a sinking down. |
| 25. | a moderate or temporary decrease: a dip in stock-market prices. |
| 26. | a downward extension, inclination, slope, or course. |
| 27. | the amount of such extension. |
| 28. | a hollow or depression in the land. |
| 29. | a brief swim: She took a dip in the ocean and then sat on the beach for an hour. |
| 30. | Geology, Mining. the downward inclination of a vein or stratum with reference to the horizontal. |
| 31. | the angular amount by which the horizon lies below the level of the eye. |
| 32. | Also called angle of dip, inclination, magnetic dip, magnetic inclination. the angle that a freely rotating magnetic needle makes with the plane of the horizon. |
| 33. | a short, downward plunge, as of an airplane. |
| 34. | a candle made by repeatedly dipping a wick into melted tallow or wax. |
| 35. | Gymnastics. an exercise on the parallel bars in which the elbows are bent until the chin is on a level with the bars, and then the body is elevated by straightening the arms. |
| 36. | Slang. a pickpocket. |
| 37. | at the dip, Nautical. not fully raised; halfway up the halyard: an answering pennant flown at the dip. Compare close (def. 75b). |
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dip (dĭp) Pronunciation Key
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