different between gipper vs nipper

gipper

English

Etymology

gip (clean [fish] for curing) +? -er (suffix forming agent nouns)

Pronunciation

  • (General American, Received Pronunciation) enPR: g??p?r, IPA(key): /???p?/

Noun

gipper (plural gippers)

  1. (obsolete except dialectal) One who gips (i.e., cleans fish in preparation for curing).

Translations

References

  • ‘Gi·pper’ s.v. “Gip, v.” on page 173/1 of § 2 (G) of volume IV (F and G, ed. Henry Bradley, 1901) of A New English Dictionary on Historical Principles (1st ed.)

Anagrams

  • grippe

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nipper

English

Etymology

nip +? -er

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?n?p?(?)/
  • Rhymes: -?p?(?)

Noun

nipper (plural nippers)

  1. One who, or that which, nips.
  2. (usually in the plural) Any of various devices (as pincers) for nipping.
  3. (slang) A child.
    • 1949, George Orwell, Nineteen Eighty-Four, p. 193. ?ISBN
      Heard what I was saying, and nipped off to the patrols the very next day. Pretty smart for a nipper of seven, eh?
  4. (Australia) A child aged from 5 to 13 in the Australian surf life-saving clubs.
    • 2003 Some Like It Hot: The Beach As a Cultural Dimension
      SLSA has become a multi-million dollar enterprise comprising 262 clubs located around the Australian coastline, with 100000 members, which included thousands of juniors or 'nippers', as they were more commonly known.
    • 2008, Tania Cassidy, Robyn L. Jones, Paul Potrac, Understanding Sports Coaching: The Social, Cultural and Pedagogical Foundations of Coaching Practice
      It is the first day of training for a group of ten 'little nippers' (novice surf life-savers). An assortment of children expectantly hover in the clubhouse.
    • 2009, Didgeridoos and Didgeridon'ts: A Brit 's Guide to Moving Your Life Down Under
      Every club around Australia offers a Nippers programme. Nippers is open to children from the age of 5 through to 13 years old []
    • October 6, 2011, [1]
      The Nippers program, for children aged five to thirteen, promotes water safety skills and confidence in a safe beach environment
    • September 5, 2013, Eve Jeffery, "Nippers season begins on the north coast", in Echonetdaily
      Of our movement’s 153,000 members, over 58,500 are nippers (5-13 years). This equates to nearly 40% of our total membership and shows just how significant the junior movement is within surf lifesaving.
  5. (historical) A boy working as a navvies' assistant.
  6. (Canada, slang, Newfoundland) A mosquito.
  7. One of four foreteeth in a horse.
  8. (obsolete) A satirist.
    • 1570, Roger Ascham, The Schoolmaster
      [] ready backbiters, sore nippers, and spiteful reporters privily of good men.
  9. (obsolete, slang) A pickpocket; a young or petty thief.
  10. A fish, the cunner.
  11. A European crab (Polybius henslowii).
  12. The claws of a crab or lobster.
  13. A young bluefish.
  14. (dated) A machine used by a ticket inspector to stamp passengers' tickets.
    • 1908, Transport World (volume 24, page 319)
      The railway ticket nipper has the identification number of the conductor on it []
  15. One of a pair of automatically locking handcuffs.

Synonyms

  • (pickpocket): see Thesaurus:pickpocket

Translations

Verb

nipper (third-person singular simple present nippers, present participle nippering, simple past and past participle nippered)

  1. (nautical, transitive) To seize (two ropes) together.

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