释义 |
[ lip-uhn ] / ˈlɪp ən / Chiefly Scot.
verb (used with object)to trust (a person). to entrust (something) to a person. verb (used without object)to have confidence, faith, or trust. Origin of lippen1125–75; Middle English lipnen, earlier lipnien Words nearby lippenlip out, lipovaccine, lipoxygenase, Lippe, lipped, lippen, lipper, Lippershey, Lippi, lippick, lipping Dictionary.com UnabridgedBased on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2020 Example sentences from the Web for lippenAy, I think I may lippen her to you, since ye have carried her before. Allison Bain|Margaret Murray Robertson "Your life is charmed, Armande," exclaimed Lippen in admiration. Fighting in France|Ross Kay Corby an' me's twa auld friends, an' we hae a great deal to lippen to ane another. The Three Perils of Man, Vol. 1 (of 3)|James Hogg Lippen, the soldier who had fought so valiantly in the chteau, suddenly sprang to his feet. Fighting in France|Ross Kay
We lippen on yin anither in a quiet kind o' a wey, ye ken—never askin' or demandin', but aye expectin', an' aye gettin'.
|