释义 |
nip noun- a nipple, especially a woman’s US
The nickname given to the character Elaine Benes (played by Julia Louis-Dreyfus) on Seinfeld (NBC, 1990–98) after a snapshot that she took for a Christmas card showed a breast nipple. - Say, Lil had nips on her titties about the size of your thumb. — Bruce Jackson, Get Your Ass in the Water and Swim Like Me, p. 150, 1965
- They are certainly very large, but they are also firm and nicely shaped and they have the good nips. — Dan Jenkins, Semi-Tough, p. 158, 1972
- She was a healthy-looking bitch, a jogger type with a great rack ... a couple of real pointers. And I’m not talking about a bra with rubber nipples. I’m talking about a pair of honest-to-Christ pointed nips that must have wieghed as much as silver dollars. — Gerald Petievich, To Die in Beverly Hills, p. 93, 1983
- There’s a certain kind of uniquely American girl who comes from the Midwest to Greenwich Village–cute as a button, pert derriere, full wet lips, nips in eternal distention, etc., etc. — Terry Southern, Now Dig This, p. 1, 1986
- I kept looking at you, your little nips showing in that thin material[.] — Elmore Leonard, Freaky Deaky, p. 15, 1988
- See, your nip [nipple] is really hard here. — Robert Stoller and I.S. Levine, Coming Attractions, p. 155, 1991
- How big and brown are your nips? — Nicholson Baker, Vox, p. 10, 1992
- Give us some details. Were they long nips? Flat nips? Dark areolas? Were they big silver dollar nips? — The 40-Year Old Virgin, 2005
- a small drink US, 1736
- You’re just in time to join me in a nip. — Chester Himes, If He Hollers Let Him Go, p. 80, 1945
- in Winnipeg, a hamburger CANADA, 1987
- “A guy’d decide, he was gonna check himself in, and he would, and before he did it he’d get a couple friends of his and they’d come down every day and put ten nips in the woods where he said.” — George Higgin, Cogan’s Trade, p. 19, 1974
- Winnipeg’s 24-hour, 7-days a week hamburger were Salisbury Houses, who has always called its hamburgers “nips.” Winnipeggers still refer to nips when speaking of hamburgers. — Chris Thain, Cold as a Bay Street Banker’s Heart, p. 106–107, 1987
- a manoeuvre, especially while driving BERMUDA
- — Peter A. Smith and Fred M. Barritt, Bermewjan Vurds, 1985
- a Japanese or Japanese-American person US, 1942
Shortened from “Niponese”. Deemed offensive by Multicultural Management Program Fellows, Dictionary of Cautionary Words and Phrases, 1989. - If you ever do get a live Nip, keep him away from Daniels. — Eric Lambert, The Veterans, p. 143, 1954
- But if the Nips were all there were left, then the Nips it would have to be. — Earl Thompson, Tattoo, p. 4, 1974
- — Edith A. Folb, Runnin’ Down Some Lines, p. 248, 1980
- a Honda car UK
Citizens’ band radio slang for the product of a Japanese manufacturer; a specific use of a generally racist term. - — Peter Chippindale, The British CB Book, p. 161, 1981
- a Vietnamese person US
- They were referred to as gooks, slopes, dinks, and nips. — Richard Burns, Pathfinder, p. 366, 2002
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