释义 |
hip verb- to explain, to bring up to date, to inform US, 1932
- And I was going to be a musician, a Negro musician, hipping the world about the blues the way only Negroes can. — Mezz Mezzrow, Really the Blues, p. 18, 1946
- He got no horse to lend me, but he hips me about Tony and I’m headin for a score. — George Mandel, Flee the Angry Strangers, p. 313, 1952
- Al Sublette is the boy who could hip you on all the latest, especially if he has enuf money to stock his phone with records. — Jack Kerouac, Letter to Philip Whalen, p. 548, 7 February 1956
- He called in his flunkies and hipped ’em real good[.] — Dan Burley, Diggeth Thou?, p. 25, 1959
- [A] good spirit–Norman Mailer all over again–comes along and hips them to the fact[.] — Cecil Brown, The Life & Loves of Mr. Jiveass Nigger, p. 56, 1969
- People depend on the radio to hip them to the whole cultural scene. — John Sinclair, Guitar Army, p. 133, 1972
- Hip me to what happened! — A.S. Jackson, Gentleman Pimp, p. 27, 1973
- How about if I come with you and you hip me? — Bobby Seale, A Lonely Rage, p. 65, 1978
- to figure out, to become aware US
- Trouble is too many guys get wasted before they hip up. Shame on them. — Edwin Torres, Carlito’s Way, p. 77, 1975
▶ hip your ship to let you know US- — Lavada Durst, The Jives of Dr. Hepcat, p. 12, 1953
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