[
US
/ˈɫɪpt/
]
[ UK /lˈɪpt/ ]
[ UK /lˈɪpt/ ]
ADJECTIVE
-
having a lip or lips
a lipped bowl
a virgin purest lipped
How To Use lipped In A Sentence
- He never complained, except when he occasionally slipped on muddy cobblestones.
- Yovich was next to go, bowled for four by a beauty that clipped the top of off stump as it swung away from him.
- * A few of the women flipped through photos of Manou's bastide, * observing its before and after transformation. French Word-A-Day:
- His foot slipped and he grasped at a piece of jutting tile and dragged himself back to safety.
- Bosses are keeping tight-lipped about WHO he will play. The Sun
- His beard went all round under his chin, and was clipped into the appearance of a stiff thick hedge — equally thick, and equally broad, and equally protrusive at all parts. John Caldigate
- Carefully she clipped the grass the grave and arranged the pinky - white, small chrysanthemums the tin cross.
- In other matches University made it two wins in a row with a 4-2 win over Whippersnappers, although University slipped back to their bad habits and defaulted the bottom two boards.
- At the touch of a button one of the blank monitors blipped to life, displaying a scene that was being picked up by a hidden remote camera.
- Fancy an heir that a father had seen born well-featured and fair, turning suddenly wry-nosed, club-footed, squint-eyed, hair-lipped, wapper-jawed, carrot-haired, from a pride become an aversion, -- my case was yet worse. The Complete Poetical Works of James Russell Lowell