释义 |
tip·ple I. \ˈtipəl\ verb (tippled ; tippled ; tippling \-p(ə)liŋ\ ; tipples) Etymology: back-formation from obsolete English tippler barkeeper, from Middle English tipler, tipeler transitive verb 1. : to drink (intoxicating liquor) especially continuously in small amounts < farmers, artisans, and tradesmen tippled the stiffer drink — W.H.Lyon > 2. archaic : to spend or lose by tippling : squander intransitive verb : to drink intoxicating liquor especially by habit or to excess < had been tippling all that morning — Hamilton Basso > < the managers are afraid to drink … and the ex-boxers are usually too broke to tipple — A.J.Liebling > II. noun (-s) : an intoxicating beverage : drink < trying to forget him and seeking oblivion in tipple — Norman Douglas > < an old gentleman … whose only tipple was straight vodka — A.J.Liebling > III. verb (-ed/-ing/-s) Etymology: freq. of tip (III) intransitive verb dialect England : tumble, overturn transitive verb dialect England : to cause to fall, upset, or overturn IV. noun (-s) 1. : an apparatus by which loaded cars are emptied by tipping sometimes including an elevated runway or framework upon which the cars are run for tipping — compare tip IV 3b 2. : the place where tipping is done : tip; specifically : a coal-screening plant |