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sip
1[ sip ]
verb (used with object)
- to drink (a liquid) a little at a time; take small tastes of:
He sipped the hot tea noisily.
- to drink from a little at a time:
The bird sipped the flower.
- to take in; absorb:
to sip knowledge at its source.
verb (used without object)
- to drink by sips.
noun
- an instance of sipping; a small taste of a liquid:
One sip told me that the milk was sour.
- a small quantity taken by sipping:
Take just a sip, not a gulp or a swallow.
SIP
2- supplemental income plan.
sip
/ sɪp /
verb
- to drink (a liquid) by taking small mouthfuls; drink gingerly or delicately
noun
- a small quantity of a liquid taken into the mouth and swallowed
- an act of sipping
Derived Forms
- ˈsipper, noun
Other Words From
- sipping·ly adverb
- un·sipped adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of sip1
Word History and Origins
Origin of sip1
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
“Every time Chad loses his shirt, have a sip of wine, beer or eat a cookie,” he laughs over Zoom, as one hand brushes his golden strands behind his ear.
Next Best Picture's Philip Bagnall suggested the film is "engineered to keep the kids busy around 4pm on Christmas Day while mum and dad sip their third Irish coffee in peace".
And with nothing else to do but sip beer, they talked late into the night, occasionally visited by deer that wandered down from the mountains.
The service ends in the salon, with an “anti-hair loss” treatment and blow-dry as you sip tea and eat sweets.
Gardner’s arm-waving impression paired with strange stories about McEntire’s hometown of McAlester, Okla., where, “If you think the milk is spoiled, give it another sip.”
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