Pippin

[ US /ˈpɪpɪn/ ]
[ UK /pˈɪpɪn/ ]
NOUN
  1. any of numerous superior eating apples with yellow or greenish yellow skin flushed with red
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How To Use Pippin In A Sentence

  • So saying, he swung round the rude calico bag, bulging with booty, which hung from his shoulders, and took from it two Ribston pippins. The Terrible Twins
  • They took cottage cheese and cold chicken breasts; cereal and microwave brownies and grapes and pippin apples. THE FORBIDDEN GAME
  • A recent survey of voters aged 21 to 34 by the Straits Times newspaper found that 36% relied on the Internet as their chief source of political news, pipping newspapers with 35%. A New Wind Blows in the Lion City
  • The best Ribston pippins, — some people say the only real Ribston pippins, — in all Rufford are to be found here, and its Burgundy pears and walnuts are almost equally celebrated. The American Senator
  • Contemporary Frankish writers are explicit in making the timing of the battle of Fontenoy dependant on Pippin's appearance.
  • Celestin's apparent pipping of Michel "Sweet Micky" Martelly, a musician-turned politician, amid a low turnout, shambolic polling and widespread fraud prompted riots in several cities, with protestors saying Celestin would be a puppet of the unpopular Preval. Haiti ruling party says candidate out of presidential run-off
  • Meanwhile, a debt had been contracted and four years later the papacy sent Pippin the bill.
  • Apple trees were straining beneath the weight of a bumper crop of what looked like Cox's orange pippins.
  • She rings from a call box and them pips are forever pipping. THE ONLY GAME
  • Our readers seem to like it chilly, but this year Adriatic sunshine has won through, pipping perennial favourites Iceland, Finland and Norway.
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