| 单词 | chipping | 
| 释义 | chippingn. 1.   a.  Chiefly British. A small piece or fragment of any relatively hard substance, typically one broken or split from a larger piece by means of a sharp blow or knock; esp. a small irregular fragment of stone, often used for road surfacing; (also) a small (typically thin) splinter, sliver, or shaving of wood, often used as horticultural mulch. Chiefly in plural. Also figurative.In quot. ?c1400: a small piece of froth in the sea. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > refuse or rubbish > 			[noun]		 > refuse part of anything > cut, broken, or fallen off paring1314 chipping?c1400 parurec1400 pare?a1425 offals1538 off-shaving1565 clipping1579 peeling1598 pinching1688 whittling1854 the world > relative properties > wholeness > incompleteness > part of whole > 			[noun]		 > a separate part > a fragment > shaving or chip chipa1393 sprotea1400 chipping?c1400 spallc1440 clipping1461 spalea1500 chiplet1873 paint chip1891 ?c1400						 (    H. Daniel Liber Uricrisiarum 		(Royal 17 D.i)	 		(2020)	  iii. vi. f. 92 (MED)  				Anoþer maner..þer is, þat is as who seie no froth, but it is as it were litil smale desicions, i. smale chippinges, smale particlez of froth, as it were wonder smale greynes holdand hem in diuerse places in the vryn.   Promptorium Parvulorum 		(Harl. 221)	 75  				Chyppynge of ledyr, or clothe, or other lyke, succidia. 1596    T. Nashe Haue with you to Saffron-Walden sig. M3v  				Hewd and slasht he had beene as small as chippings, if he had not played ducke Fryer. 1677    R. Plot Nat. Hist. Oxford-shire 244  				The chippings of the stone they hew at their Quarry. 1747    W. Hooson Miners Dict. sig. 8j  				Scafflings [is] what comes off from the Ore in dressing it..which is called also by the name of Chippings. 1865    Englishman's Mag. Feb. 152  				Dealing in parings and chippings of reasoning. 1890    H. Ellis Criminal vii. 287  				Many took a memento of some sort, either a chipping of rock, a pebble, or a stone from the cave. 1935    Times 2 Apr. 53/2  				Probably the most effective method in these conditions is to lay a natural asphalt lightly covered with pre-coated hard chippings. 2010    Huddersfield Daily Examiner 		(Nexis)	 15 May 6  				Our road..has been covered with chippings, but has never been white lined. 2013    Country Smallholding Feb. 32/3  				We don't want to spread bark chippings. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > food > dishes and prepared food > bread > piece of bread > 			[noun]		 > crust of slice > paring of crust chip?c1425 chipping1469 1469    in  Coll. Ordinances Royal Househ. 		(1790)	 95  				Noe fees to be taken in that office, save only chippinges and kuttinges of the looves of trenchours. 1474    in  Coll. Ordinances Royal Househ. 		(1790)	 *32  				The Pantryes, Chippinges, and broken breade. 1592    T. Nashe Pierce Penilesse 		(Brit. Libr. copy)	 sig. F3 v  				Thou hast capd and kneed him (when thou wert hungry) for a chipping. 1621    R. Burton Anat. Melancholy  iii. i. iii. 523  				Poore Lazarus lies howling..he onely seeks chippings. 1727    R. Bradley Chomel's Dictionaire Oeconomique 		(Dublin ed.)	 at Duck  				[Ducks] eating such Grain or Chippings as you shall throw to them. 1896    Belfast News-let. 26 Dec. 6/7  				The host needed to teach economy with regard to the ‘chippings’.  2.  The action of chip v.1   (in various senses); esp. the action of cutting or hewing small fragments off something with a sharp tool. Also: an instance of this. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > wholeness > mutual relation of parts to whole > separation > separation or detachment > 			[noun]		 > breaking off > chipping or splitting off > losing pieces by chipping1419 spalling1842 spallation1971 the world > food and drink > food > food manufacture and preparation > preparation for table or cooking > preparation of bread > 			[noun]		 > paring crust chipping1611 the world > relative properties > wholeness > mutual relation of parts to whole > separation > separation or detachment > 			[noun]		 > breaking off > chipping or splitting off chipping1815 1419–20    in  M. Sellers York Memorandum Bk. 		(1912)	 I. 199  				Quod quilibet taskeman recipiat pro chippyng cujuslibet centene arcuum xvj d..pro bendyng cujuslibet centene v s..et pro afterbendyng cujuslibet centene xx d. 1534    G. Joye tr.  Jeremy Prophete xlvi. f. lxxxiiiiv  				Euen the same tyme that he shal be present to destroye al Palestyne withe other eylandis deuyded from ye lande: there shal come a shauyng and chipping vpon Gazam. 1611    R. Cotgrave Dict. French & Eng. Tongues at Chapplis  				The chipping of bread. 1743    W. Ellis Mod. Husbandman Nov. 5  				When such Wheat is sown so late that its Chipping or sprouting meets a hard frost. 1815    J. Smith Panorama Sci. & Art I. 17  				Metals are sometimes wrought by chipping. 1865    E. B. Tylor Res. Early Hist. Mankind viii. 193  				The instruments..show a vast predominance of chipping over grinding. 1904    Pract. Stable Fitters 33  				The Double Edge holds the cement and prevents its chipping. 2005    Sydney Morning Herald 		(Nexis)	 3 May 14  				The main red variety, pontiac, is recognisable by its bright rose-coloured skin, is great mashed or roasted but not so good for chipping. 2016    Sunday Tel. 		(Nexis)	 24 Apr. 22  				Their eyes would sting from dust caused by the chipping of the stones. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > ill health > injury > 			[noun]		 > chap or crack > action or fact chipperinga1398 chipping1526 chapping1703 1526    Grete Herball xcvi. Sig. Fv./1  				For newe clyftes or chyppynge of the lyppes..lay the powdre of canell in the clyftes and than bynde them wel togyder. 1607    E. Topsell Hist. Foure-footed Beastes 189  				A plaister thereof made with Oyle of Roses..cureth..the chippings in the fingers. 1849    Reynolds's Misc. 4 Aug. 31/1  				To prevent Chipping of the Skin, melt half a pound of soft soap over a slow fire, add a gill of sweet oil and half a teacupful of fine sand. Rub this on the skin once or twice a day. 1915    W. A. Woodbury Care of Face i. 8  				The skin..may have been subjected to other irritants like sunburn, causing discolorations or reddening and chipping or scaling.  4.  The implantation of a microchip in an animal for the purposes of tracking or identification. Cf. chip v.1 13. ΚΠ 1991    Southern Times Messenger 		(Adelaide)	 		(Nexis)	 31 July 9/2  				[The] RSPCA publicity officer..said she was confident the chipping system would be successful. 2008    Chicago Tribune 		(Midwest ed.)	 13 Apr.  xiii. 6/5  				[She]..has reservations about chipping in general. She prefers a good collar and tags. 2020    Mirror 		(Nexis)	 23 Dec. 26  				Dog chipping became compulsory [in the UK] in 2016. Compounds  chipping axe  n. a tool used for chipping or slicing away the surface of wood to dress or shape it; a hatchet or small axe suitable for such use; = chip axe n.   Now rare. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > cutting tool > axe > 			[noun]		 > small adzeeOE hatcheta1350 chip axe1371 chipping axec1425 hack-chip1440 hatcha1533 plane-axe1611 planing axe1611 hand-axe1790 hack iron1831 tommy axe1848 tommy1873 Pulaski1924 c1425    Bk. Found. St. Bartholomew's 		(1923)	 29 (MED)  				He folowid yn greter workys hewerrys of wode with axe and squarerys of tymbyr with chippynge axe. a1450						 (    tr.  Vegetius De Re Militari 		(Douce)	 		(1988)	 102  				Þey [sc. soldiers] hadde also double eggid axus, schipping axes, brood axes, for housinge and tymber, and sawes also. 1778    Gen. Evening Post 		(London)	 2–4 July  				Near to the windows at which the villains broke in was found a coulter from a plough..and also a small chipping axe. 1997    Canad. Mennonite 10 Nov. 20  				Stephen Wambua's chipping axe falls precisely, flaking away only minute bits of butternut wood with each stroke.   chipping bit  n. 		 †(a) a projection on a metal part enabling it to be aligned or fitted firmly with another; = chipping piece n.   (obsolete);		 (b) a bit for a drill or similar tool designed to remove small fragments of material, typically having a pointed or flattened end. ΚΠ 1849    J. Britten Brit. Patent 12,548 		(1855)	 3  				Instead of the ordinary chipping bit..I use a set screw. 1889    Cent. Dict. at Lance  				In carp[entry], a pointed blade, as that affixed to one side of a chipping-bit or router to sever the grain around the path of the tool. 1987    Official Gaz. 		(U.S. Patent Office)	 21 July 1371/2  				Process of forming openings in reinforced concrete,..employing a drilling or chipping bit inserted into a hand-held drilling device. 2011    U. C. Kalita Soil Mech. & Foundation Engin. xiii. 235  				Water is forced under pressure through a hollow drill rod fitted with a sharp cutting edge or chipping bit.   chipping block  n. a solid block of material on which an item is placed to be shaped by chipping or cutting (in quot. 1769   in figurative use); spec. a low flat area between the face and horn of an anvil.Cf. chopping-block n. at chopping n.1 Compounds 2. ΚΠ 1769    Polit. Reg. Mar. 155  				This disagreeable circumstance..irritated the court party, who had made Nevil Jones a chipping-block, on which to try their power. 1876    Q. Jrnl. Geol. Soc. 32 251  				Figure 3 represents a rude flake which has the bulb of percussion and the surface of the chipping-block as well marked as in most flint implements of the same kind. 1893    G. B. Kilborn Elem. Woodwork v. 34  				Lay the board on the chipping-block, holding it with the left hand. 1973    R. F. Wiseman Compl. Horseshoeing Guide 		(ed. 2)	 ii. 41  				Some anvils have a flat area, or chipping block, used for cutting so that the face will not be damaged.   chipping chisel  n. a cold chisel with a sharp edge or point, used to smooth or shape the surface of a piece of work in metal or stone. ΚΠ 1815    J. Smith Panorama Sci. & Art I. 17 		(heading)	  				The chipping chisel.—The punch. 1925    Pop. Mech. Aug. 340/2  				The chipping chisel should have a thin cutting edge or point. 2014    B. Russell James Watt iv. 139  				They hardened and tempered their tools to give them a good cutting edge by heating them to a pale straw yellow for lathe tools, or a yellow tinged with purple for chipping chisels and saws.   chipping hammer  n. a hammer with a head that is pointed at one end and (typically) shaped like a chisel at the other, used to chip apart hard or fused materials; (also in later use) a power tool designed for this use. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > driving or beating tools > 			[noun]		 > hammer > other hammers hand-hammereOE maulc1225 plating hammer1543 bucker1653 axe-hammer1681 brick hammer1688 chipping hammer1783 tup1848 clinch-hammer1850 tack-hammer1865 bucking hammer1875 bloat1881 ringer1883 key hammer1884 peen hammer1885 straight pein1904 toffee hammer1958 society > occupation and work > equipment > driving or beating tools > 			[noun]		 > hammer > mechanical and power hammers > types of tilt-hammer1773 trip-hammer1781 tilt1831 Nasmyth1845 oliver1846 helve-hammer1858 striker1869 belly-helve1881 chipping hammer1988 1783    J. Brown Rep. Cases High Court Parl. 1701–79 V. 371  				The purer, richer and cleaner part of it [sc. the ore], is dressed by an instrument called a chipping hammer, which chips and separates the base minerals from it. 1839    Amer. Railroad Jrnl. 15 Nov. 305  				Should a thin incrustation remain on the plates [of the boiler], the slightest blow will cause it to fall off in large flakes.., without the use of the chipping hammer. 1988    St. Petersburg 		(Florida)	 Times 		(Nexis)	 24 June 17 a  				Even if you have modern pneumatic chipping hammers, chipping rust is a tedious, boring, never-ending job. 2005    M. W. Litchfield Renovation 		(ed. 3)	 vii. 145  				The first pass of the chipping hammer separates damaged stucco from intact stucco.   chipping knife  n. 		 †(a) a knife used to cut or pare the crust from a loaf of bread (obsolete);		 (b) a knife designed to chip or break off fragments, esp. one having a wide blade which can be used in a manner similar to a chisel. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > food > food manufacture and preparation > equipment for food preparation > 			[noun]		 > knife dressing knife1362 trencher-knife1392 bread knife1432 kitchen knife1433 dresser knifea1450 carving-knifea1475 sticking knife1495 chipper1508 chipping knife1526 butcher's knife1557 striking knife1578 mincing knife1586 cook's knife1599 oyster knife1637 randing knife1725 stick knife1819 chopping-knife1837 carver1839 butch knife1845 fish-carver1855 fruit-knife1855 rimmer1876 throating knife1879 steak knife1895 paring knife1908 1526    Inventory in  J. P. Collier Trevelyan Papers 		(1857)	 127  				ij chyppyng knyfys. 1601    Househ. Bk. Q. Elizabeth in  Coll. Ordinances Royal Househ. 		(1790)	 294  				The yeomen [of the Pantry] have for their fees, all the chippings of breade..for the which they find chipping knives. 1610    Althorp MS in  J. N. Simpkinson Washingtons 		(1860)	 Introd. 8  				Itm paring iron, cheeping knives, tosting forke. 1726    E. Ward News from Madrid 36  				With my Iron-Rasp I fell'd him, Then drew my Chipping-knife to gueld him. 1947    Telephony 5 July 20/2  				Student cable splicers often damage conductors when using a chipping knife to remove cable sheath. 2010    A. L. Pietroni Ruby's Spoon 277  				Ruby glanced at Captin, cleaning his chipping knife, to see how he'd react.   chipping machine  n. a machine used for breaking down material (esp. wood) into chips (cf. wood chipper n. at wood n.1 Additions); spec. (in early use) such a machine used to prepare dye-wood for processing. ΚΠ 1823    Bristol Mercury 18 Aug.  				Chipping machine worth 200l., rasping [machine worth] 340l.; there was a flour-mill worth 250l., with dye-goods of 15l., besides a cart; all seized. 1905    Jrnl. Royal Soc. Arts 53 708/1  				The wood is brought from the river or from the stacks in the mill yard, sawn into suitable lengths, passed through the barking machine, then through the knotting machine, afterwards fed into the chipping machine. 2020    South Wales Argus 		(Nexis)	 22 Mar.  				It was absolutely heart breaking to see the loggers methodically hacking this majestic tree to pieces with their chainsaws and then feeding the branches into a chipping machine.   chipping piece  n. a projection from the surface of a cast or forged metal part, designed to be reduced using hand tools to give the final shape, or enabling it to be aligned and fitted firmly against another part. ΚΠ 1837    S. C. Brees Railway Pract. 13  				Three thicknesses of patent felt are to be interposed between the bracing frames and girders, one thickness between the bracing frame and main rib, where the chipping pieces are shewn in the drawing. 1838    London Jrnl. Arts & Sci. 11 285  				These parts are cast with chipping pieces, and are nicely fitted so as to make them nearly steam-tight. 1873    E. Tomkins Machine Constr. & Drawing I. xii. 76  				The whole of the bottom surface is planed, or more commonly chipping-pieces H are cast to the base-plate, so as to reduce the amount of surface to be planed or chipped. 1902    Amer. Machinist 7 Aug. 1106/3  				In leaving the rib back from the edge a fraction of an inch it forms a chipping piece around the edge so that it can be easily chipped to fit together in case there is any rocking of the part on another. 1962    Foundry Trade Jrnl. 8 Mar. 302/2  				The size of the chipping-piece fillet is a regular shape for each mould produced. ΚΠ 1744    W. Ellis Mod. Husbandman Jan. i. 2  				If it [sc. wheat] has a good sprouting or Chipping-Time. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > industry > building or constructing > constructing or working with wood > 			[noun]		 tree-workc1275 carpentry1377 wrightinga1500 wrightrya1500 carpenter-work?1553 carpentership1574 wright-work1630 chipping trade1792 carpentering1838 woodcraft1853 woodworking1872 axemanship1893 woodwork1913 1792    ‘P. Pindar’ Odes to Kien Long 76  				The carpenters..the men of chipping trade. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2021; most recently modified version published online March 2022). chippingadj.  That chips or is prone to chipping (in various senses of chip v.1); now esp. that has become broken at the edge or on the surface. ΘΚΠ the world > plants > by growth or development > 			[adjective]		 > sprouting or germinating bearingOE burgeoninga1382 burging1398 springingc1400 sprouting1531 upstarting1581 sprigging1583 teeming1642 germinating1657 fruticant1670 shooting1717 chipping1743 c1510    H. Watson tr.  Gospelles of Dystaues sig. C.iii  				Whan the chyppynge wynde bloweth. 1743    W. Ellis Mod. Husbandman Nov. i. 5  				The chipping Part of the Wheat as we call it in Hertfordshire. 1876    Sheffield Daily Tel. 8 Aug. 7/2  				The weather was not very favourable, there being a strong and chipping wind blowing. 1960    E. McBain 		(2005)	 xiv. 110  				After a while you get got used to the chipping paint and the soiled walls and the bad lighting. 2008    Atlantic Monthly Nov. 122/3  				Such pressing activities as peeling off chipping nail polish distracted me. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2021). <  | 
	
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