| a chattering or flighty, light-headed person. |
| the offspring of a zebra and a donkey. |
wipe (waɪp) ![]() | |
| —vb (usually foll by off, away, from, up, | |
| 1. | to rub (a surface or object) lightly, esp with (a cloth, hand, etc), as in removing dust, water, grime, etc |
| 2. | to remove by or as if by rubbing lightly: he wiped the dirt from his hands |
| 3. | to eradicate or cancel (a thought, memory, etc) |
| 4. | to erase a recording from (an audio or video tape) |
| 5. | informal (Austral) to abandon or reject (a person) |
| 6. | to apply (oil, grease, etc) by wiping |
| 7. | to form (a joint between two lead pipes) with solder or soft lead |
| 8. | informal wipe the floor with someone to defeat someone decisively |
| —n | |
| 9. | the act or an instance of wiping |
| 10. | (in film editing) an effect causing the transition from one scene to the next in which the image of the first scene appears to be wiped off the screen by that of the second |
| 11. | dialect a sweeping blow or stroke |
| 12. | dialect (Brit) a gibe or jeer |
| 13. | obsolete a slang name for handkerchief |
| [Old English wīpian, related to Middle Low German wīpen, wīp bundle (of cloth), Old High German wīffa, wīfan to wind, Gothic weipan to wreathe] | |
| wipe out | |
| —vb | |
| 1. | (tr) to destroy completely; eradicate |
| 2. | informal (tr) to murder or kill |
| 3. | (intr) to fall or jump off a surfboard or skateboard |
| —n | |
| 4. | an act or instance of wiping out |
| 5. | the interference of one radio signal by another so that reception is impossible |
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wipe (sth) out definition
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wipe out
Destroy, as in The large chains are wiping out the independent bookstores. Originally put simply as wipe, the idiom acquired out in the first half of the 1800s.
Kill; also, murder. For example, The entire crew was wiped out in the plane crash, or The gangsters threatened to wipe him and his family out. [Late 1800s]