adrip
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English
Etymology
Pronunciation
Adjective
adrip (not comparable) (predicative)
- (of a liquid) Dripping.
- 1896, Fiona Macleod, The Washer of the Ford[2], Edinburgh: Patrick Geddes, page 273:
- There was a gurgling and spurting sound as of dammed water adrip.
- 1913, Mary Austin, The Lovely Lady[3], Garden City, NY: Doubleday, Page, Part 1, p. 23:
- […] the air [was] sweet with the sap adrip from the orchards lately pruned […]
- 1985, Conrad Richter, “As It Was in the Beginning”, in The Rawhide Knot and Other Stories[4], Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, page 153:
- Out in the trading post he could hear them playing seven-up, could smell the brandy adrip from empty horns at the players’ elbows.
- (of a surface) Covered (with a liquid) to the point that it drips; having a liquid dripping off it.
- Synonym: dripping
- 1893, Ambrose Bierce, “The Death of Halpin Frayser”, in Can Such Things Be?[5], New York: Cassell, page 17:
- The dust in the road was laid; trees were adrip with moisture; birds sat silent in their coverts; the morning light was wan and ghastly […]
- 1913, William Butler Yeats, “The Grey Rock”, in Responsibilities and Other Poems[6], London: Macmillan, page 9:
- And she with Goban’s wine adrip,
No more remembering what had been,
Stared at the gods with laughing lip.
- 1948, Edgar Maass, The Queen’s Physician[7], New York: Scribner, Book 3, Chapter 8:
- Melting snow gurgled in drainspouts and gutters, all Copenhagen was adrip.
- (figurative) Covered or filled (with something) as if to the point of dripping.
- Synonym: dripping
- 1890, Donald G. Mitchell, chapter 5, in English Lands, Letters and Kings: From Elizabeth to Anne[8], New York: Scribner, pages 190–191:
- […] he [Andrew Marvell] was witty with the wittiest; was caustic, humorous; his pages adrip with classicisms;
- 1919, Irving Babbitt, chapter 10, in Rousseau and Romanticism[9], Boston: Houghton Mifflin, page 368:
- the humanitarian, all adrip with brotherhood and profoundly convinced of the loveliness of his own soul
- 1985, Peter Popham, chapter 5, in Tokyo: The City at the End of the World[10], Tokyo: Kodansha International, page 132:
- All the big hotels here are adrip with neon, with flashing signs, nameboards that light up one letter at a time, zipping dotted arrows […]
- (slang, US) Intoxicated with alcohol.[1]
- Synonym: drunk