plip
See also: Plip
English
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -ɪp
Etymology 1
Noun
plip (plural plips)
- A light sound or action like liquid hitting a surface.
- He heard the plips of rain on the roof.
Verb
plip (third-person singular simple present plips, present participle plipping, simple past and past participle plipped)
- To make the sound of liquid hitting a hard surface.
Etymology 2
From Plip (“remote control locking device”), perhaps influenced by onomatopoeia.
Verb
plip (third-person singular simple present plips, present participle plipping, simple past and past participle plipped)
- To lock or unlock using a remote control locking device.
- 2004, Jenny Colgan, Isla Dewar, Muriel Gray, et al. (contributors), Scottish Girls About Town, page 69,
- […] was unloading bags from the boot of a tiny, shiny, black Ka thing which she then plipped shut with an electronic key.
- 2009, Matt Beaumont, Staying Alive, unnumbered page,
- I point it out to my companion, but he's already moving ahead of me, aiming the remote at the Porsche and plipping it open.
- 2011, Stuart MacBride, Shatter the Bones, unnumbered page,
- He plipped the locks on the pool car, stuck the keys in his pocket and flexed his aching left hand.
- 2004, Jenny Colgan, Isla Dewar, Muriel Gray, et al. (contributors), Scottish Girls About Town, page 69,
Anagrams
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