释义 |
▪ I. hipped, hipt, a.1|hɪpt| [f. hip n.1 and v.2 + -ed.] 1. Having hips: esp. in comb., as large-hipped.
1508Dunbar Flyting w. Kennedie 179 Hippit as ane horrow. 1597A. M. tr. Guillemeau's Fr. Chirurg. 50 b/2 To be hipped and legged, or have a payere of goode and stedfast stiltes vnder them. 1611Cotgr., Hanchu,..great hipt. 1854H. H. Wilson tr. Rig-veda II. 289 Wide-hipped Siníválí ..grant us, goddess, progeny. 2. Arch. Of a roof: Having hips (see hip n.1 3).
1823P. Nicholson Pract. Build. 129 A hiped roof, over a rectangular plan. 1870F. R. Wilson Ch. Lindisf. 50 The tower is covered with a hipped, slated roof. 3. Having the hip injured or dislocated; lamed in the hip; hip-shot.
1565–73Cooper Thesaurus, Delumbata quadrupide, the beast being hipped. 1607Topsell Four-f. Beasts (1658) 315 The Horse is said to be hipt, when the hip-bone is removed out of his right place..It cometh most commonly by some great stripe or strain. 1709Lond. Gaz. No. 4601/4 All black, with his further Hip hipped. 1799[see hip-shot 1]. ▪ II. hipped, a.2 colloq.|hɪpt| Also 8 hip'd, hipt. [Altered spelling of hypt, hypp'd, f. hip n.3, orig. hyp.] Affected with hypochondria; morbidly depressed or low-spirited.
1710[see hypt]. 1712Steele Spect. No. 284 ⁋4, I have been to the last Degree hipped since I saw you. 1833Longfellow Outre-mer Prose Wks. 1886 I. 120 What with his bad habits and his domestic grievances, he became completely hipped. 1887Smiles Life & Labour 446 When he..had nothing to do, he became hipped, then ill, and then was told that he was dying. ▪ III. hipped, ppl. a. see hip v.5 |