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Hip   /hɪp/   Listen
Hip

noun
1.
Either side of the body below the waist and above the thigh.
2.
The structure of the vertebrate skeleton supporting the lower limbs in humans and the hind limbs or corresponding parts in other vertebrates.  Synonyms: pelvic arch, pelvic girdle, pelvis.
3.
The ball-and-socket joint between the head of the femur and the acetabulum.  Synonyms: articulatio coxae, coxa, hip joint.
4.
(architecture) the exterior angle formed by the junction of a sloping side and a sloping end of a roof.
5.
The fruit of a rose plant.  Synonyms: rose hip, rosehip.
adjective
(compar. hipper; superl. hippest)
1.
Informed about the latest trends.  Synonyms: hep, hip to.



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"Hip" Quotes from Famous Books



... that colchicum would vainly attempt to baffle, that no nepenthe soothes, no opium can send to sleep—Gout, that makes as light of the medical practitioner as of his patient; that murdered Musgrave, and seized her very own historian by the hip[9]—this, our most formidable foe, is to be conquered at Vichy! Here, in a brief time, the iron gyves of Podagra are struck off, and Cheiragra's manacles are unbound; enabling old friends, who had hitherto shaken their heads in ...
— Blackwoods Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 59, No. 365, March, 1846 • Various

... sir, I did not. I escaped with only a few contusions about the region of the hip, which certainly lamed me for some time, and made the jolting more disagreeable than ever. Well, the reconnaissance succeeded. Damremont was, however, wrong altogether. I told him so when I met him; but he ...
— Olla Podrida • Frederick Marryat

... about face—quick! Your back's prettier than your face, and besides, I want to know whether your hip-pockets are empty. I've heard it's the habit of you gentry to pack guns in your clothes.... None? That's all right, then. Now roost on the transom, over there in the corner, Stryker, and don't move. Don't let me hear a word ...
— The Black Bag • Louis Joseph Vance

... striking in appearance only because of his dandified dress and evil visage. He wore a lace scarf, a tight, bright-buttoned jacket, a buckskin vest embroidered in red, a sash and belt joined by an enormous silver clasp. Gale saw again the pearl-handled gun swinging at the bandit's hip. Jewels flashed in his scarf. There were gold rings in his ears and ...
— Desert Gold • Zane Grey

... my feet, and my right hand went to my hip pocket. The head pushed through the thicket, and a bent and aged form followed slowly. I drew out my revolver, but the figure of the old man straightened itself up and he waved his hand impatiently, as ...
— Five Nights • Victoria Cross


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