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trip
1[ trip ]
noun
- a journey or voyage:
to win a trip to Paris.
- a journey, voyage, or run made by a boat, train, bus, or the like, between two points:
It's a short trip from Baltimore to Philadelphia.
- a single journey or course of travel taken as part of one's duty, work, etc.:
his daily trip to the bank.
- a stumble; misstep.
- a sudden impeding or catching of a person's foot so as to throw the person down, especially in wrestling.
- a slip, mistake, error, or blunder.
- an error or lapse in conduct or etiquette.
- a light, nimble step or movement of the feet.
- Machinery.
- a projecting object mounted on a moving part for striking a control lever to stop, reverse, or otherwise control the actions of some machine, as a milling machine or printing press.
- a sudden release or start.
- a catch of fish taken by a fishing vessel in a single voyage.
- Slang.
- an instance or period of being under the influence of a hallucinogenic drug, especially LSD.
- the euphoria, illusions, etc., experienced during such a period.
- any stimulating or exciting experience:
The class reunion was a real trip.
- any intense interest or preoccupation:
She's been on a nostalgia trip all week.
- a period of time, experience, or lifestyle:
Those early years in college were a bad trip.
verb (used without object)
- to stumble:
to trip over a child's toy.
- to make a slip, error, or mistake, as in conversation or conduct.
- to go with a light, quick step or tread:
She tripped gaily across the room.
- to make a journey or excursion.
- to tip or tilt.
- Horology. (of a tooth on an escape wheel) to slide past the face of the pallet by which it is supposed to be locked and strike the pallet in such a way as to move the balance or pendulum improperly.
- Slang. to be under the influence of a hallucinogenic drug, especially LSD (often followed by out ):
He tripped out on peyote.
verb (used with object)
- to cause to stumble (often followed by up ):
The rug tripped him up.
- to cause to fail; hinder, obstruct, or overthrow.
- to cause to make a slip or error (often followed by up ):
to trip up a witness by skillful questioning.
- to catch in a slip or error.
- to tip or tilt.
- Nautical.
- to break out (an anchor) by turning over or lifting from the bottom by a line tripping line attached to the anchor's crown.
- to tip or turn (a yard) from a horizontal to a vertical position.
- to lift (an upper mast) before lowering.
- to operate, start, or set free (a mechanism, weight, etc.) by suddenly releasing a catch, clutch, or the like.
- Machinery. to release or operate suddenly (a catch, clutch, etc.).
- to tread or dance lightly upon (the ground, floor, etc.).
- Archaic. to perform with a light or tripping step, as a dance.
trip
2[ trip ]
noun
- a group of animals, as sheep, goats, or fowl; flock.
trip
/ trɪp /
noun
- an outward and return journey, often for a specific purpose
- any tour, journey, or voyage
- a false step; stumble
- any slip or blunder
- a light step or tread
- a manoeuvre or device to cause someone to trip
- Also calledtripper
- any catch on a mechanism that acts as a switch
- ( as modifier )
trip button
- a surge in the conditions of a chemical or other automatic process resulting in an instability
- informal.a hallucinogenic drug experience
- informal.any stimulating, profound, etc, experience
verb
- often foll byup, or when intr, by on or over to stumble or cause to stumble
- to make or cause to make a mistake or blunder
- troften foll byup to trap or catch in a mistake
- intr to go on a short tour or journey
- intr to move or tread lightly
- informal.intr to experience the effects of LSD or any other hallucinogenic drug
- tr
- to activate (a mechanical trip)
- to switch electric power off by moving the switch armature to disconnect the supply
Derived Forms
- ˈtrippingly, adverb
Other Words From
- un·tripped adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of trip1
Word History and Origins
Origin of trip1
Idioms and Phrases
- lay a trip on, Slang. to inflict one's preoccupations or obsessions on (another person):
Mother's been trying to lay a guilt trip on me about leaving home.
- trip the light fantastic, Facetious. to go dancing.
More idioms and phrases containing trip
- bad trip
- ego trip
- round trip
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
The show will also include documenting the winner’s ISS trip, including their launch and 10-day space station stay, as well as their return journey and landing.
They’re waterproof, which makes them good for whitewater trips, too.
Some said, “That’ll be the trip of your life,” while others noted, “That place will change you.”
It’s here that my parents told me to take a trip to the village to search for these answers on my own.
Case would even offer to fly out promising and hard-to-reach startups to have them join the trip.
Finding the shop is a trip in itself and an introduction to a slice of history.
Anthony Goldstein probably chose a trip to the Quidditch World Cup over his Birthright trip to Israel.
After my first trip to his place in Tucson we called one another on the telephone.
“During this trip, I did as a lone wolf, I risked a lot,” he said.
My trip takes the reverse path, and I begin by assessing the depth of my Shakespeare knowledge in his birthplace.
The Comet started on her first trip up the Arkansas, being the first steam boat that ascended that river.
Liszt has returned from his trip, and I have played to him twice this week, and am to go again on Monday.
But Punch was five; and he knew that going to England would be much nicer than a trip to Nassick.
The Italian trip was discussed, and considerable ignorance of geography was, as is usual, manifested by all present.
I knowed, a-course, that I could go kick up a fuss when Simpson stopped by his office on his trip back from Goldstone.
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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