Dip
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Dip

Noah Webster's New International Dictionary of the English Language

1. (v. t.) To plunge or immerse; especially, to put for a moment into a liquid; to insert into a fluid and withdraw again.

2. (v. t.) To immerse for baptism; to baptize by immersion.

3. (v. t.) To wet, as if by immersing; to moisten.

4. (v. t.) To plunge or engage thoroughly in any affair.

5. (v. t.) To take out, by dipping a dipper, ladle, or other receptacle, into a fluid and removing a part; -- often with out; as, to dip water from a boiler; to dip out water.

6. (v. t.) To engage as a pledge; to mortgage.

7. (v. i.) To immerse one's self; to become plunged in a liquid; to sink.

8. (v. i.) To perform the action of plunging some receptacle, as a dipper, ladle. etc.; into a liquid or a soft substance and removing a part.

9. (v. i.) To pierce; to penetrate; -- followed by in or into.

10. (v. i.) To enter slightly or cursorily; to engage one's self desultorily or by the way; to partake limitedly; -- followed by in or into.

11. (v. i.) To incline downward from the plane of the horizon; as, strata of rock dip.

12. (v. i.) To dip snuff.

13. (n.) The action of dipping or plunging for a moment into a liquid.

14. (n.) Inclination downward; direction below a horizontal line; slope; pitch.

15. (n.) A liquid, as a sauce or gravy, served at table with a ladle or spoon.

16. (n.) A dipped candle.


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