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tiptop

[ UK /tˈɪptɒp/ ]
NOUN
  1. the highest level or degree attainable; the highest stage of development
    at the height of her career
    the peak of perfection
    his landscapes were deemed the acme of beauty
    at the top of his profession
    summer was at its peak
    ...catapulted Einstein to the pinnacle of fame
    so many highest superlatives achieved by man
    the summit of his ambition
    the artist's gifts are at their acme
  2. the extreme top or summit
ADJECTIVE
  1. of the highest quality
    played top-notch tennis
    a super party
    she is absolutely tops
    a first-rate golfer
    an ace reporter
    a crack shot
    an athlete in tiptop condition

How To Use tiptop In A Sentence

  • Plant Nomenclature • Family Cucurbitaceae - Genus Cucurbita • species pepo - summer squash, pumpkin, acorn squash maxima - hubbard, buttercup, kabocha moschata - butternut, Long Island Cheese mixta - variety or cultivar Zephyr, Howden, Tiptop Blue Ballet, bonbon Waltham butternut Green striped cushaw - Also in the Cucurbitaceae family: Cucumis melo Recently Uploaded Slideshows
  • “Even the TARDIS is in tiptop shape, so there’re not even any repairs that need doing.” I Am Fangirling and Fic Update
  • Not used to feeling anything but tiptop well, the vague malaise frightened her. THE THORN BIRDS
  • The sculpturing of artistic conception is in the tiptop level of Chinese garden art.
  • Asked about his health, he said he was fine and in "tiptop" shape, before the media was ushered out of the cell. ANC Daily News Briefing
  • tiptop" condition with all the requisite updates and repairs. The Memphis Daily News
  • an athlete in tiptop condition
  • Qwilleran ordered soup and a veggieburger, and while she was preparing it, he said, "There are conflicting reports on what happened at Tiptop on that day. The Cat Who Moved A Mountain
  • Now I have the capability of getting in tiptop shape because USATODAY.com - Gardner gets a second chance
  • Her eyes missed nothing; her dainty close-set ears heard all -- the short, dry note of a chewink, the sweet, wholesome song of the cardinal, the thrilling cries of native jays and woodpeckers, the heavenly outpoured melody of the Florida wren, perched on some tiptop stem, throat swelling under the long, delicate, upturned bill. The Firing Line
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