different between lip vs labially

lip

English

Etymology

From Middle English lippe, from Old English lippa, lippe (lip), from Proto-West Germanic *lippj? (lip), from Proto-Germanic *lepô, from Proto-Indo-European *leb- (to hang loosely, droop, sag). Cognate with West Frisian lippe (lip), Dutch lip (lip), German Lippe and Lefze (lip), Swedish läpp (lip), Norwegian leppe (lip), Latin labium (lip).

Pronunciation

  • enPR: l?p, IPA(key): /l?p/
  • Rhymes: -?p

Noun

lip (countable and uncountable, plural lips)

  1. (countable) Either of the two fleshy protrusions around the opening of the mouth.
    Synonym: labium
  2. (countable) A part of the body that resembles a lip, such as the edge of a wound or the labia.
    Synonym: labium
  3. (by extension, countable) The projecting rim of an open container; a short open spout.
    Synonyms: edge, rim, spout
  4. (slang, uncountable) Backtalk; verbal impertinence.
    Synonyms: backchat, cheek (informal), impudence, rudeness
  5. The edge of a high spot of land.
    • 1894, David Livingstone, A Popular Account of Dr Livingstone's Expedition to the Zambesi and its Tributaries, Chapter VII
    • 1913, D.H. Lawrence, Sons and Lovers, chapter 12
  6. The sharp cutting edge on the end of an auger.
  7. (botany) One of the two opposite divisions of a labiate corolla.
  8. (botany) The distinctive petal of the Orchis family.
  9. (zoology) One of the edges of the aperture of a univalve shell.
  10. (music, colloquial) Embouchure: the condition or strength of a wind instrumentalist's lips.

Meronyms

  • (fleshy protrusion): philtrum, Cupid's bow, vermilion, commissure

Derived terms

Translations

Verb

lip (third-person singular simple present lips, present participle lipping, simple past and past participle lipped)

  1. (transitive) To touch or grasp with the lips; to kiss; to lap the lips against (something).
    • c. 1606, William Shakespeare, Antony and Cleopatra, Act II, Scene 5,[1]
      [] a hand that kings
      Have lipp’d and trembled kissing.
    • 1826, Winthrop Mackworth Praed, “Josephine” in The New Monthly Magazine, Volume 16, No. 63, March 1826, p. 308,[2]
      Our love was like the bright snow-flakes,
      Which melt before you pass,
      Or the bubble on the wine which breaks
      Before you lip the glass;
    • 1901, Robert W. Chambers, Cardigan, New York: Harper, 1902, Chapter 9, p. 130,[3]
      Once [] at dawn, I heard a bull-moose lipping tree-buds, and lay still in my blanket while the huge beast wandered past, crack! crash! and slop! slop!through the creek []
    • 1929, William Faulkner, The Sound and the Fury, New York: Vintage, 1956, “June Second 1910,” p. 144,[4]
      [] in a quick swirl the trout lipped a fly beneath the surface with that sort of gigantic delicacy of an elephant picking up a peanut.
  2. (transitive, figuratively) (of something inanimate) To touch lightly.
    • 1971, Iris Murdoch, An Accidental Man, New York: Viking, p. 405,[5]
      He moved the boat onward very slowly, lipping the glossy surface delicately with the light oars.
  3. (intransitive, transitive) To wash against a surface, lap.
    • 1898, Arthur Conan Doyle, The Tragedy of the Korosko, London: Smith, Elder & Co., Chapter 10, p. 324,[6]
      It was very soothing and restful up there on the saloon deck, with no sound but the gentle lipping of the water as it rippled against the sides of the steamer.
    • 1922, John Masefield, The Dream, London: Heinemann, p. 9,[7]
      So on I went, and by my side, it seemed,
      Paced a great bull, kept from me by a brook
      Which lipped the grass about it as it streamed
      Over the flagroots that the grayling shook;
    • 2008, Julie Czerneda, Riders of the Storm, New York: Daw Books, Interlude, p. 406,[8]
      The mist that lipped against the wall behind him hung overhead like a ceiling, hiding any stars.
  4. (intransitive) To rise or flow up to or over the edge of something.
    • 1903, Robert Barr, Over the Border, London: Isbister, Book 4, Chapter 7, p. 375,[9]
      Below, the swollen Eden, lipping full from bank to bank, rolled yellow and surly to the sea.
    • 1911, Charles G. D. Roberts, Neighbors Unknown, U.S. edition, New York: Macmillan, “Mothers of the North,” p. 256,[10]
      The rest of the herd were grouped so close to the water’s edge that from time to time a lazy, leaden-green swell would come lipping up and splash them.
    • 1939, John Steinbeck, The Grapes of Wrath, New York: Viking, Chapter Twenty-Two, p. 410,[11]
      The sun lipped over the mountain by now, shone on the corrugated-iron roofs of the five sanitary units, shone on the gray tents and on the swept ground of the streets between the tents.
    • 1973, Mary Stewart, The Hollow Hills, New York: William Morrow, Book I, Chapter 3, p. 26,[12]
      Above the spring the little statue of the god Myrddin, he of the winged spaces of the air, stared from between the ferns. Beneath his cracked wooden feet the water bubbled and dripped into the stone basin, lipping over into the grass below.
  5. (transitive) To form the rim, edge or margin of something.
    • 1894, Fiona Macleod, Pharais, Derby, Chapter 4, p. 88,[13]
      [] old Macrae, of Adrfeulan Farm near by, had caused rude steps to be cut in the funnel-like hollow rising sheer up from the sloping ledge that lipped the chasm and reached the summit of the scaur.
    • 1920, W. E. B. Du Bois, Darkwater: Voices from Within the Veil, New York: Harcourt, Brace & Howe, Chapter 9, p. 242,[14]
      It was a tiny stone house whose front window lipped the passing sidewalk where ever tramped the feet of black soldiers marching home.
    • 1924, James Oliver Curwood, A Gentleman of Courage, New York: Cosmopolitan, Chapter 3, p. 36,[15]
      The woman had slipped to the very edge of the rock—the edge that lipped the fury of the Pit. She was half over. And she was slipping—slipping....
  6. (transitive) To utter verbally.
    • 1818, John Keats, Endymion, London: Taylor & Hessey, Book I, lines 964-965, p. 48,[16]
      Salt tears were coming, when I heard my name
      Most fondly lipp’d []
  7. (transitive) To simulate speech by moving the lips without making any sound; to mouth.
    • 1887, Thomas Hardy, The Woodlanders, Chapter 46,[17]
      “Ah, I thought my memory didn’t deceive me!” he lipped silently.
    • 1980, Cyril Dabydeen, “Mammita’s Garden Cove” in Caribbean New Wave: Contemporary Short Stories, London: Heinemann, 1990, p. 65,[18]
      And as he read, lipping the words, he thought of his own boyhood []
  8. (sports) To make a golf ball hit the lip of the cup, without dropping in.
    • 1910, Fred M. White, “A Record Round,” The Windsor Magazine, March 1910,[19]
      “I shall find the ball to the left of a patch of sword grass near the hole,” he said. “My second will lip the hole, I know it as well as if I could see the whole thing.”
    • 1999, J. M. Gregson, Malice Aforethough, Sutton: Severn House, Chapter Nine, p. 112,[20]
      Lambert just missed his three; his putt lipped the hole before finishing two feet past it.
  9. (transitive, music) To change the sound of (a musical note played on a wind instrument) by moving or tensing the lips.

Translations

Anagrams

  • LPI, PIL

Afrikaans

Etymology

From Dutch lip, from Middle Dutch leppe, with influence of Middle Low German lippe, from Old Dutch leppa, from Proto-West Germanic *lippj?.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /l?p/

Noun

lip (plural lippe, diminutive lippie)

  1. lip (part of the mouth)

Dutch

Etymology

From Middle Dutch leppe, with influence of Middle Low German lippe, from Old Dutch leppa, from Proto-West Germanic *lippj?.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /l?p/
  • Hyphenation: lip
  • Rhymes: -?p

Noun

lip f (plural lippen, diminutive lipje n)

  1. lip (part of the mouth)
  2. lip (of a container)

Related terms

  • lipklank
  • liplezen
  • lippen
  • lippendienst
  • lippenrood
  • lippenstift
  • lipvis
  • loslippig
  • bovenlip
  • onderlip
  • schaamlip
Descendants
  • Afrikaans: lip

Anagrams

  • pil

Gallo

Etymology

(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)

Noun

lip ? (plural lips)

  1. lip

Lower Sorbian

Etymology

From Proto-Slavic *l??p?.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /lip/, [l?ip]

Noun

lip m (diminutive lipk)

  1. glue, birdlime

Declension

Derived terms

  • lipa?

Verb

lip

  1. second-person singular imperative of lipa?

Alternative forms

  • lipaj

Further reading

  • lip in Ernst Muka/Mucke (St. Petersburg and Prague 1911–28): S?ownik dolnoserbskeje r?cy a jeje nar?cow / Wörterbuch der nieder-wendischen Sprache und ihrer Dialekte. Reprinted 2008, Bautzen: Domowina-Verlag
  • lip in Manfred Starosta (1999): Dolnoserbsko-nimski s?ownik / Niedersorbisch-deutsches Wörterbuch. Bautzen: Domowina-Verlag.

Min Nan


Polish

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /l?ip/

Noun

lip f

  1. genitive plural of lipa

Serbo-Croatian

Alternative forms

  • (Ekavian): l?p
  • (Ijekavian): lij?p

Etymology

From Proto-Slavic *l?p?.

Adjective

lip (Cyrillic spelling ???)

  1. (Chakavian, Ikavian) nice, pretty
    • 1375, N.N., Muka svete Margarite (transribed from Glagolitic original):
      Pasite se, ovce mile,
      sve ste lipe, sve ste bile
    • 1501, Marko Maruli?, Judita:
      Tad se us?udiše svi, vidiv Juditu,
      toko lipa biše i u takovu svitu.
    • 1759, Antun Kanižli?, Sveta Rožalija:
      Ovog zaru?nika, lipa, mila, sri?na,
      imati jest dika, sri?a, radost vi?na.

Tok Pisin

Etymology

From English leaf

Noun

lip

  1. leaf

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  • what lipstick goes with blue eyeshadow


labially

English

Etymology

labial +? -ly

Adverb

labially (comparative more labially, superlative most labially)

  1. (linguistics, dentistry) In a labial manner; by means of the lips.
    • 2013, Carole Hollins, Questions and Answers for Dental Nurses (page 44)
      Transillumination of anterior teeth, using the composite curing light placed labially to shine through the tooth and be viewed using the mouth mirror, shows up any cavities as dark interproximal shadows.

labially From the web:

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