a hollow cylinder of metal, wood, or other material, used for the conveyance of water, gas, steam, petroleum, etc.
a tube of wood, clay, hard rubber, or other material, with a small bowl at one end, used for smoking tobacco, opium, etc.
a quantity, as of tobacco, that fills the bowl of such a smoking utensil.
Music.
a tube used as, or to form an essential part of, a musical wind instrument.
a musical wind instrument consisting of a single tube of straw, reed, wood, or other material, as a flute, clarinet, or oboe.
one of the wooden or metal tubes from which the tones of an organ are produced.
a small end-blown flute played with one hand while the other beats a small drum.
Nautical.
boatswain's pipe.
the sound of a boatswain's pipe.
the call or utterance of a bird, frog, etc.
pipes,Informal. the human vocal cords or the voice, especially as used in singing.
Usually pipes.
Music.bagpipe.
a set of flutes, as a panpipe.
Informal.a tubular organ or passage of a human or animal body, especially a respiratory passage: to complain of congested pipes.
any of various tubular or cylindrical objects, parts, or formations, as an eruptive passage of a volcano or geyser.
Mining.
a cylindrical vein or body of ore.
(in South Africa) a vertical, cylindrical matrix, of intrusive igneous origin, in which diamonds are found.
Metallurgy. a depression occurring at the center of the head of an ingot as a result of the tendency of solidification to begin at the bottom and sides of the ingot mold.
Botany. the stem of a plant.
verb (used without object),piped,pip·ing.
to play on a pipe.
Nautical. to signal, as with a boatswain's pipe.
to speak in a high-pitched or piercing tone.
to make or utter a shrill sound like that of a pipe: songbirds piping at dawn.
verb (used with object),piped,pip·ing.
to convey by or as by pipes: to pipe water from the lake.
to supply with pipes.
to play (music) on a pipe or pipes.
to summon, order, etc., by sounding the boatswain's pipe or whistle: all hands were piped on deck.
to bring, lead, etc., by or as by playing on a pipe: to pipe dancers.
to utter in a shrill tone: to pipe a command.
to trim or finish with piping, as an article of clothing.
Cooking. to force (dough, frosting, etc.) through a pastry tube onto a baking sheet, cake or pie, etc.
Informal. to convey by an electrical wire or cable: to pipe a signal from the antenna.
Slang. to look at; notice: Pipe the cat in the hat.
Verb Phrases
pipe down,Slang. to stop talking; be quiet: He shouted at us to pipe down.
pipe up,
to begin to play (a musical instrument) or to sing.
to make oneself heard; speak up, especially as to assert oneself.
to increase in velocity, as the wind.
Origin of pipe
1
before 1000; (noun) Middle English, Old English pīpe musical pipe, tube (cognate with Dutch pijp,Low German pīpe,German Pfeife,Old Norse pīpa) <Vulgar Latin *pīpa, derivative of Latin pīpāre to chirp, play a pipe; (v.) Middle English pipen; in part continuing Old English pīpian to play a pipe <Latin pīpāre; in part <Old French piper to make a shrill sound <Latin pīpāre (cf. peep2)
Carson also warned that “there’s a fortune” to be made off building the parallel pipe.
The Water Authority Is Resurrecting Its Pipe Dream – Again|MacKenzie Elmer|September 1, 2020|Voice of San Diego
The Water Authority estimates the pipe could save ratepayers other billions – eventually.
The Water Authority Is Resurrecting Its Pipe Dream – Again|MacKenzie Elmer|September 1, 2020|Voice of San Diego
The Water Authority studied the pipe dream at least five times in the past.
The Water Authority Is Resurrecting Its Pipe Dream – Again|MacKenzie Elmer|September 1, 2020|Voice of San Diego
While solids and liquids descend the network, sewer gases — often detectable by their odor — sometimes rise through pipes in the absence of sufficient water, said Morawska, who wasn’t part of the research team.
Scientists found coronavirus in a long-vacant apartment. A possible spreader? ‘Fecal aerosol plumes’|Claire Zillman, reporter|August 27, 2020|Fortune
This weekend, NBC 7 reported that city workers did in fact move into the building before the sewage system had been repaired and the drinking water had been flushed — meaning there was brown water coming out of the pipes.
Morning Report: The Deal Before the 101 Ash St. Deal|Voice of San Diego|August 24, 2020|Voice of San Diego
I was drawn to The Class for different reasons—chiefly, the pipe dream of achieving a tighter and tauter backside.
How Taryn Toomey’s ‘The Class’ Became New York’s Latest Fitness Craze|Lizzie Crocker|January 9, 2015|DAILY BEAST
And then I said, ‘Well, chief, when the admiral comes aboard, the first mate has to pipe him in.’
The Story Behind Lee Marvin’s Liberty Valance Smile|Robert Ward|January 3, 2015|DAILY BEAST
It would be like if after the 40th pipe in Flappy Bird was a scarecrow.
Lost For Thousands of Strokes: 'Desert Golfing' Is 'Angry Birds' as Modern Art|Alec Kubas-Meyer|January 2, 2015|DAILY BEAST
There was poop humor—literally—when Valerie's house becomes flooded with fecal matter after a pipe bursts.
‘The Comeback’ Finale: Give Lisa Kudrow All of the Awards|Kevin Fallon|December 29, 2014|DAILY BEAST
All it needs is one more “pipe” to select and transmit the crucial information.
Red Tape and Black Boxes: Why We Keep ‘Losing’ Airliners in 2014|Clive Irving|December 29, 2014|DAILY BEAST
He had found his pipe and was about to go downstairs again when she stopped him.
The Red House Mystery|A. A. Milne
Then he would light his pipe or his cigar and take from the shelf the uppermost copy of the pile of Daily Republicans there.
From Place to Place|Irvin S. Cobb
One barrel of cement would joint about 300 sections of pipe.
Concrete Construction|Halbert P. Gillette
While filling in the excavation, the pipe represented in Fig. 22 was found in the dirt which had been removed from it.
Burial Mounds of the Northern Sections of the United States|Cyrus Thomas
The bother and vexation arising from the pipe were very great during the campaigns of the late war.
Smoking and Drinking|James Parton
British Dictionary definitions for pipe (1 of 2)
pipe1
/ (paɪp) /
noun
a long tube of metal, plastic, etc, used to convey water, oil, gas, etc
a long tube or case
an object made in any of various shapes and sizes, consisting of a small bowl with an attached tubular stem, in which tobacco or other substances are smoked
(as modifier)a pipe bowl
Also called: pipefulthe amount of tobacco that fills the bowl of a pipe
zoologybotanyany of various hollow organs, such as the respiratory passage of certain animals
any musical instrument whose sound production results from the vibration of an air column in a simple tube
any of the tubular devices on an organ, in which air is made to vibrate either directly, as in a flue pipe, or by means of a reed
an obsolete three-holed wind instrument, held in the left hand while played and accompanied by the taborSee tabor
the pipes See bagpipes
a shrill voice or sound, as of a bird
a boatswain's pipe
the sound it makes
(plural)informalthe respiratory tract or vocal cords
metallurgya conical hole in the head of an ingot, made by escaping gas as the metal cools
a cylindrical vein of rich ore, such as one of the vertical diamond-bearing veins at Kimberley, South Africa
Also called: volcanic pipea vertical cylindrical passage in a volcano through which molten lava is forced during eruption
USslangsomething easy to do, esp a simple course in college
put that in your pipe and smoke itinformalaccept that fact if you can
verb
to play (music) on a pipe
(tr)to summon or lead by a pipeto pipe the dancers
to utter (something) shrilly
to signal orders to (the crew) by a boatswain's pipe
(tr)to signal the arrival or departure ofto pipe the admiral aboard
(tr)to convey (water, gas, etc) by a pipe or pipes
(tr)to provide with pipes
(tr)to trim (an article, esp of clothing) with piping
(tr)to force (cream, icing, etc) through a shaped nozzle to decorate food
See also pipe down, pipe up
Derived forms of pipe
pipeless, adjectivepipy, adjective
Word Origin for pipe
Old English pīpe (n), pīpian (vb), ultimately from Latin pīpāre to chirp
British Dictionary definitions for pipe (2 of 2)
pipe2
/ (paɪp) /
noun
a large cask for wine, oil, etc
a measure of capacity for wine equal to four barrels. 1 pipe is equal to 126 US gallons or 105 Brit gallons
a cask holding this quantity with its contents
Word Origin for pipe
C14: via Old French (in the sense: tube, tubular vessel), ultimately from Latin pīpāre to chirp; compare pipe1