drip
oxford
views updated May 29 2018drip / drip/ •
v. (dripped, drip·ping) [intr.] let fall or be so wet as to shed small drops of liquid: the faucet won't stop dripping | his hands were dripping with blood. ∎ (of liquid) fall in small drops: water dripped from her clothing. ∎ [tr.] cause or allow (a liquid) to fall in such a way: the candle was dripping wax down one side. ∎ fig. display a copious amount or degree of a particular quality or thing: the women were dripping with gold and diamonds | [tr.] her voice dripped sarcasm. •
n. 1. a small drop of a liquid: she put the bucket on top of the dresser to catch the drips. ∎ [in sing.] the action or sound of liquid falling steadily in small drops: the drip, drip, drip of the leak in the roof. ∎ short for drip feed.2. inf. a weak and ineffectual person.3. Archit. a projection or groove on the underside of a cornice, windowsill, or molding that prevents rain from running down the wall below. Compare with dripstone.
The Oxford Pocket Dictionary of Current English
drip
oxford
views updated May 17 2018drip. 1. Any projection so shaped as to throw rainwater off and stop it running back to the wall, usually with a channel or throat underneath.
2. Head- or hood-mould,
label, or weather-moulding over the head of an aperture.
A Dictionary of Architecture and Landscape Architecture JAMES STEVENS CURL
drip
oxford
views updated May 21 2018drip (intravenous drip) (drip) n. apparatus for the continuous injection (transfusion) of blood, plasma, saline, glucose solution, or other fluid into a vein. The fluid flows under gravity from a suspended bottle through a tube ending in a hollow needle inserted into the patient's vein. Many infusions are now controlled by electronically regulated infusion pumps.
A Dictionary of Nursing
drip
oxford
views updated Jun 08 2018drip let fall in drops XV; intr. XVII. — MDa.
drippe (Da.
dryppe), f. Gmc. *
drupp- (see
DROP).
Hence
drip sb.,
dripping XV.
The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Etymology T. F. HOAD