dipping
Pronunciation
  • IPA: /ˈdɪpɪŋ/
Verb
  1. present participle of dip#English|dip
Noun

dipping (plural dippings)

  1. An act or process of immersing.
    • 1587, Raphael Holinshed et al., Holinshed's Chronicles, “Henry II of England,” p. 82,
      […] it was ordeined, that children shuld be brought to the church, there to receiue baptisme in faire water, with thrée dippings into the same, in the name of the father, the sonne, and the Holie-ghost […]
    • 1753, William Hogarth, The Analysis of Beauty, London: for the author, Chapter 13, p. 110,
      By an infinite number of materials, I mean colours and shades of all kinds and degrees; some notion of which variety may be formed by supposing a piece of white silk by several dippings gradually dyed to a black; and carrying it in like manner through the prime tints of yellow, red, and blue; and then again, by making the like progress through all the mixtures that are to be made of these three original colours.
    • 1952, John Steinbeck, East of Eden (novel), London: Heinemann, Part One, Chapter 3, I, p. 11,
      Baby Adam cried a good deal at the beginning of the wake, for the mourners, not knowing about babies, had neglected to feed him. Cyrus soon solved the problem. He dipped a rag in whisky and gave it to the baby to suck, and after three or four dippings young Adam went to sleep.
  2. The act of inclining downward.
  3. The act of lifting or moving a liquid with a dipper, ladle, or the like.
  4. The process of cleaning or brightening sheet metal or metalware, especially brass, by dipping it in acids, etc.
  5. (US) The use of dipping tobacco (moist snuff) in the mouth, usually between the lip and gum or cheek and gum in the lower or upper part of the mouth.



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