释义 |
lipped, ppl. a.|lɪpt| [f. lip n. or v. + -ed.] 1. Having or furnished with a lip or lips; having lips of a specified kind. Often in parasynthetic comb., as blubber-lipped, red-lipped, thick-lipped.
1377onwards [see babber, blabber, blobber, blubber]. 1604Shakes. Oth. iv. ii. 63 Thou young and Rose-lip'd Cherubin. 1755Johnson, Lipped, having lips. 1820Keats Lamia i. 189 A virgin purest lipped. 1844Willis Lady Jane i. 644 Lamps conceal'd in bells of alabaster, Lipp'd like a lily. 1851Beck's Florist 133 Stalk..inserted in a small, sometimes a lipped, hollow. c1865J. Wylde in Circ. Sci. I. 403/2 A lipped vessel should..be used. 1897Allbutt's Syst. Med. II. 1058 The filaridæ are long filiform worms with a lipped, a papillated, or a simple mouth. 1897M. Kingsley W. Africa 72 Delicate little nostrils, mouths not too heavily lipped. 1902Brit. Med. Jrnl. 12 Apr. 879 The synovial membrane was found rather inflamed, and the edges of the cartilages were lipped. 2. Bot. = labiate; also, having a labellum.
1836Loudon Encycl. Plants Gloss., Lipped, having a distinct lip or labellum. 1847W. E. Steele Field Bot. Introd. 16 (Gloss.), Lipped = Bilabiate. 1854S. Thomson Wild Fl. iii. (ed. 4) 251 Another lipped flower, is the..hemp nettle. |