different between hyp vs hym

hyp

English

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?h?p/

Noun

hyp (countable and uncountable, plural hyps)

  1. (informal, entertainment) hypnotism
    • 1840, Washington Irving, The Life of Oliver Goldsmith
      when a dream or the hyp has given us false terrors or imaginary pains
  2. (informal, entertainment) hypnotist
  3. (mathematics) hypotenuse
  4. hypochondria
    • 1731, Jonathan Swift, Cassinus and Peter
      Heaven send thou hast not got the hyps.
    • 1922, Francis Lynde, Pirates' Hope, Charles Scribner's Sons, New York, page 33:
      Guess I've got a bad case of the hyps.

Alternative forms

  • hyp.

Verb

hyp (third-person singular simple present hyps, present participle hypping, simple past and past participle hypped)

  1. (colloquial, dated) To make melancholy.

Anagrams

  • PHY

Albanian

Alternative forms

  • hip

Etymology

A variant of hip.

Verb

hyp (first-person singular past tense hypa, participle hypur)

  1. I get on, ride, straddle
  2. I rise, go up, climb into

hyp From the web:

  • what hypothesis
  • what hyperbole
  • what hypertension
  • what hyperbole means
  • what hype house member are you
  • what hypothesis mean
  • what hypothyroidism
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hym

English

Pronoun

hym

  1. Obsolete spelling of him

Manx

Pronoun

hym (emphatic form hyms)

  1. first-person singular of hug
    to me

Middle English

Etymology 1

Pronoun

hym

  1. Alternative form of him (him)

Etymology 2

Pronoun

hym

  1. Alternative form of hem (them)

Old English

Pronoun

hym

  1. Alternative form of him: (to) him/it/them

hym From the web:

  • what hymn did jesus sing
  • what hymns are sung at easter
  • what hymen
  • what hymn was sung at the last supper
  • what hymen means
  • what hymn is this
  • what hymns are sung at weddings
  • what hymns are sung at funerals
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