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词汇 lippy
释义

Definition of lippy in English:

lippy

adjectivelippiest, lippier ˈlɪpiˈlɪpi
informal
  • Insolent or impertinent.

    出言不逊,傲慢无礼的

    when I protested he accused me of being lippy
    Example sentencesExamples
    • If you fancy a duel of words with a lippy French barman while he mixes you something long and cool, then this is the place to unsheathe your rapier wit.
    • Pete was a lippy Scouser taken on when we were desperate and/or temporarily insane.
    • After the caning they took in the first two Tests, England were badly in need of a lippy bowler with plenty of menace and Kirby would have fitted the bill.
    • Culkin grounds the movie in Igby, a lippy punk with a mean streak who you can't help but like because, well, he tells it like it is.
    • They have gone from being lippy underdogs to tubby overlords in less than a decade and are now part of the establishment to which they once posed a potent challenge.
    • Yet there is another Rooney, who is lippy and arrogant, and who can't seem to keep a lid on his temper.
    • The lippy critic, who constantly tips Wanderers to be relegated from the Premiership, accepted the charity challenge to shave off his trademark moustache if Sam Allardyce's team survive the drop.
    • They're getting really lippy these days, aren't they?
    • In a provincial war office, a young woman, Eve, placidly attacks her work (she is a coder), her days enlivened by the gossip of her female colleagues and the joshing of the Big Bad Wolves, a couple of lippy sergeants.
    • When Francesca's dad advises her that the only way to deal with a lippy classmate is to ‘give her a slap’, the obedient daughter obliges.
    • Those not directly engaged by his tricks and nudges and lippy asides can enjoy a master of the midfield mind games, a proven winner in the wind-up wars.
    • They'd rather get second-hand info about the finances than have to talk to the lippy accountant.
    • Let's take her words as proof that there's a creative itch hidden somewhere, anxious to pester her back into the lippy limelight in which she glowed in the first place.
    • As well, since I noticed in Grade 5 that almost every lippy woman in literature is eventually clotheslined by fate, I wasn't too surprised when the wife in this play was struck by terminal cancer.
    • She's lippy and rude, and she's obsessed with breaking all my rules.
    • The lippy critic was given a ‘put up or shut up ultimatum’ by four fans who appeared on BBC 1's Football Focus earlier in the season.
    • Bolton is a town with a great history and a lot going for it, but we need to be known for more than the Industrial Revolution and a few lippy television presenters.
    • Besides if people get lippy you can always mention that it is a ‘radical adaptation’.
    • It's not happening for the lippy Welshman at all tonight.
    • Her coquettish verve and her lippy song material will make the gals share a laugh and leave the ducktail set absolutely spellbound.
    Synonyms
    rude, bad-mannered, ill-mannered, unmannerly, discourteous, uncivil, disrespectful, inconsiderate, boorish, churlish, ill-bred, ungentlemanly, unladylike, ungracious, ungallant
noun ˈlɪpiˈlɪpi
informal
  • mass noun Lipstick.

    口红,唇膏

    she applied some red lippy
    Example sentencesExamples
    • One in three women are Mismatched Mandys who, while they might search high and low for matching handbags, shoes and lippy, pay less care and attention to what they wear closest to their hearts (and other parts of their anatomy).
    • You don't have the luxury of a shower every day but that doesn't bother me - as long as I've got my lippie.
    • This lippie is also packed with menthol, passion flower and jojoba oil, leaving my kisser luxuriously moist and poutworthy.
    • You can't be bothered to jostle for a shard of mirror space in which to reapply your lippy, and even if you decide to fight your way through to the chalk-face you find the lighting is so dim that you end up glossing your chin.
    • But be prepared to reapply your lippy every five seconds - these glosses taste seriously good.
    • She confesses to applying a little lippie, mascara and some blusher in winter.
    • When it comes to makeover shows, it used to be a new frock or a lighter shade of lippy would suffice.
    • With so much to talk about and yet so much to avoid, it seems prudent to pack lippy as a peace offering.
    • She also raced in blouses with bows on the sleeves and she always had a powder compact and her lippy at the ready.
    • He looks like a drag queen between performances - like he's got a wig and lippy to put back on.
    • She played a woman physically allergic to shirts with sleeves, but terminally addicted to acid shades of lippie that clashed dreadfully with her chosen hair dye.
    • You may even find, as I have, that one of these five is a stubby little bit of lippy that dates back to the thirteenth-century, or at any rate, back to your mid-twenties.
    • But it took more than a bit of lippy to get the old girl back into tip-top shape.
    • It would have done the job for Matt, leaving Harriet to handle the passports and lippy - in a hide-away pouch.
    • A girl also needs peace to reapply her lippy, regroup and prepare for the next merciless assault on some feckless tippler.
    • She fiddles with the child safety cap on one, releases it and pops two pills the size of giant mutant rabbit droppings between lips still smudged with red lippie.
    • In the toilet I find 34-year-old nurse Mandy putting on her lippy.
    • Either way, this creamy, moisturising lippie provides a boost of caffeine every time you lick your lips.
    • Forget the girl wearing PVC with a whip and red lippy.
    • The successful applicant needs to be quick on his/her feet in order to reapply mascara and lippy during breaks in play, and not too hung up on the fact that real blokes don't wear makeup.

Rhymes

chippy, clippie, dippy, drippy, grippy, hippy, Lippi, Mississippi, nippy, slippy, snippy, tippy, trippy, whippy, Xanthippe, zippy

Definition of lippy in US English:

lippy

adjectiveˈlipēˈlɪpi
informal
  • Insolent or impertinent.

    出言不逊,傲慢无礼的

    when I protested he accused me of being lippy
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Besides if people get lippy you can always mention that it is a ‘radical adaptation’.
    • They have gone from being lippy underdogs to tubby overlords in less than a decade and are now part of the establishment to which they once posed a potent challenge.
    • The lippy critic, who constantly tips Wanderers to be relegated from the Premiership, accepted the charity challenge to shave off his trademark moustache if Sam Allardyce's team survive the drop.
    • If you fancy a duel of words with a lippy French barman while he mixes you something long and cool, then this is the place to unsheathe your rapier wit.
    • After the caning they took in the first two Tests, England were badly in need of a lippy bowler with plenty of menace and Kirby would have fitted the bill.
    • As well, since I noticed in Grade 5 that almost every lippy woman in literature is eventually clotheslined by fate, I wasn't too surprised when the wife in this play was struck by terminal cancer.
    • They'd rather get second-hand info about the finances than have to talk to the lippy accountant.
    • When Francesca's dad advises her that the only way to deal with a lippy classmate is to ‘give her a slap’, the obedient daughter obliges.
    • Pete was a lippy Scouser taken on when we were desperate and/or temporarily insane.
    • Her coquettish verve and her lippy song material will make the gals share a laugh and leave the ducktail set absolutely spellbound.
    • Culkin grounds the movie in Igby, a lippy punk with a mean streak who you can't help but like because, well, he tells it like it is.
    • Those not directly engaged by his tricks and nudges and lippy asides can enjoy a master of the midfield mind games, a proven winner in the wind-up wars.
    • It's not happening for the lippy Welshman at all tonight.
    • Bolton is a town with a great history and a lot going for it, but we need to be known for more than the Industrial Revolution and a few lippy television presenters.
    • Yet there is another Rooney, who is lippy and arrogant, and who can't seem to keep a lid on his temper.
    • They're getting really lippy these days, aren't they?
    • Let's take her words as proof that there's a creative itch hidden somewhere, anxious to pester her back into the lippy limelight in which she glowed in the first place.
    • In a provincial war office, a young woman, Eve, placidly attacks her work (she is a coder), her days enlivened by the gossip of her female colleagues and the joshing of the Big Bad Wolves, a couple of lippy sergeants.
    • She's lippy and rude, and she's obsessed with breaking all my rules.
    • The lippy critic was given a ‘put up or shut up ultimatum’ by four fans who appeared on BBC 1's Football Focus earlier in the season.
    Synonyms
    rude, bad-mannered, ill-mannered, unmannerly, discourteous, uncivil, disrespectful, inconsiderate, boorish, churlish, ill-bred, ungentlemanly, unladylike, ungracious, ungallant
nounˈlipēˈlɪpi
informal
  • Lipstick.

    口红,唇膏

    she applied some red lippy
    Example sentencesExamples
    • When it comes to makeover shows, it used to be a new frock or a lighter shade of lippy would suffice.
    • In the toilet I find 34-year-old nurse Mandy putting on her lippy.
    • A girl also needs peace to reapply her lippy, regroup and prepare for the next merciless assault on some feckless tippler.
    • She played a woman physically allergic to shirts with sleeves, but terminally addicted to acid shades of lippie that clashed dreadfully with her chosen hair dye.
    • Forget the girl wearing PVC with a whip and red lippy.
    • It would have done the job for Matt, leaving Harriet to handle the passports and lippy - in a hide-away pouch.
    • One in three women are Mismatched Mandys who, while they might search high and low for matching handbags, shoes and lippy, pay less care and attention to what they wear closest to their hearts (and other parts of their anatomy).
    • Either way, this creamy, moisturising lippie provides a boost of caffeine every time you lick your lips.
    • But it took more than a bit of lippy to get the old girl back into tip-top shape.
    • You can't be bothered to jostle for a shard of mirror space in which to reapply your lippy, and even if you decide to fight your way through to the chalk-face you find the lighting is so dim that you end up glossing your chin.
    • This lippie is also packed with menthol, passion flower and jojoba oil, leaving my kisser luxuriously moist and poutworthy.
    • He looks like a drag queen between performances - like he's got a wig and lippy to put back on.
    • She fiddles with the child safety cap on one, releases it and pops two pills the size of giant mutant rabbit droppings between lips still smudged with red lippie.
    • You may even find, as I have, that one of these five is a stubby little bit of lippy that dates back to the thirteenth-century, or at any rate, back to your mid-twenties.
    • But be prepared to reapply your lippy every five seconds - these glosses taste seriously good.
    • With so much to talk about and yet so much to avoid, it seems prudent to pack lippy as a peace offering.
    • She also raced in blouses with bows on the sleeves and she always had a powder compact and her lippy at the ready.
    • She confesses to applying a little lippie, mascara and some blusher in winter.
    • You don't have the luxury of a shower every day but that doesn't bother me - as long as I've got my lippie.
    • The successful applicant needs to be quick on his/her feet in order to reapply mascara and lippy during breaks in play, and not too hung up on the fact that real blokes don't wear makeup.
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