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A Writer's Dictionary:

piped Definition


Dictionary Home » Words Starting with P » pinking shears ... piracies » piped


pipe1
noun
    1. A tubular conveyance for water, gas, oil, etc.
      Thesaurus: tube, conduit, channel, passage, duct, pipeline, drainpipe, water pipe, aqueduct.
    2a. A little bowl with a hollow stem for smoking tobacco, etc;
    2b. A quantity of tobacco smoked in one of these.
    3. A wind instrument consisting of a simple wooden or metal tube.
      Thesaurus: wind instrument, flageolet, horn, tooter, whistle.
    4. The bagpipes.
      Form: the pipes
    5. Any of the vertical metal tubes through which sound is produced on an organ.
    6. A boatswain's whistle.
    7. A pipe-like vent forming part of a volcano.
    8. A cylindrical quantity of ore, etc.
    9. old use
      Any of the air passages in an animal's body.
      Example: the windpipe
verb piped, piping
    1. To convey (gas, water, oil, etc) through pipes.
    tr & intr
    2. To play on a pipe or the pipes.
      Example: piped the same tune all evening
      Thesaurus: play, sound, whistle, trill, warble.
    3. To welcome or convey with music from a pipe or the bagpipes.
      Example: piped in the haggis
      Form: pipe someone in (also)
      Form: pipe something in
    tr & intr
    4. Said of a child: to speak or say in a small shrill voice.
    intr
    5. To sing shrilly as a bird does.
    6a. To use a bag with a nozzle in order to force (icing or cream, etc from the bag) into long strings for decorating a cake, dessert, etc;
    6b. To make (designs, etc) on a cake, etc by this means.
    7. computing.
      To direct (the output of one program) into another program as its input in order to increase the speed of execution.
    8. hortic.
      To propagate by using pipings (see piping noun 5).
Derivative: pipeless
adj
    Derivative: pipe-like
    adj
      Derivative: piper
        See separate entry.
      Idiom: put that in your pipe and smoke it
        colloq
        Used dismissively in speech to emphasize and conclude some unwelcome statement, criticism, etc: think about that and see how you like it!
      Etymology: Anglo-Saxon: from Latin pipare to chirp or play a pipe.

      Phrasal Verb: pipe down
        To stop talking; to be quiet
          Example: Will you please pipe down!
      Phrasal Verb: pipe up
        To speak unexpectedly, breaking a silence, etc.


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