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rip
verb
-
rip
,
ripping
,
rips
,
ripped
to
tear
something
quickly
and
with
a
lot
of
force
,
so
that
it
comes
apart
suddenly
•
Be
careful
not
to
rip
the
wrapping
paper
when
you
open
the
gift
.
Be
careful
not
to
rip
the
wrapping
paper
when
you
open
the
gift
.
•
She
accidentally
ripped
her
jeans
on
the
fence
.
She
accidentally
ripped
her
jeans
on
the
fence
.
Middle
English
,
probably
Scandinavian
in
origin
;
related
to
Icelandic
'rýpa'
meaning
'to
tear'
.
noun
a
long
tear
or
split
in
fabric
,
paper
,
or
another
thin
material
•
There
is
a
rip
in
the
sleeve
of
my
jacket
.
There
is
a
rip
in
the
sleeve
of
my
jacket
.
•
Mom
sewed
the
rip
in
the
curtains
.
Mom
sewed
the
rip
in
the
curtains
.
Derived
from
the
verb
sense
of
'rip'
,
first
recorded
in
the
15th
century
.
verb
-
rip
,
ripping
,
rips
,
ripped
to
copy
music
,
video
,
or
other
data
from
a
CD
,
DVD
,
or
similar
disc
onto
a
computer
as
separate
files
•
She
ripped
her
old
CDs
so
she
could
listen
on
her
phone
.
She
ripped
her
old
CDs
so
she
could
listen
on
her
phone
.
•
It
only
took
a
few
minutes
to
rip
the
movie
from
the
DVD
.
It
only
took
a
few
minutes
to
rip
the
movie
from
the
DVD
.
Borrowed
in
the
1990s
from
the
idea
of
‘
tearing
’
data
off
a
disc
,
influenced
by
earlier
audio
jargon
.
trip
noun
a
journey
from
one
place
to
another
,
usually
for
a
short
time
and
often
for
pleasure
or
work
•
Our
family
is
planning
a
trip
to
the
mountains
next
weekend
.
Our
family
is
planning
a
trip
to
the
mountains
next
weekend
.
•
She
bought
a
new
suitcase
for
her
business
trip
.
She
bought
a
new
suitcase
for
her
business
trip
.
From
Middle
English
trippen
,
originally
meaning
‘
to
step
lightly
’,
later
applied
to
short
journeys
.
verb
-
trip
,
tripping
,
trips
,
tripped
to
catch
your
foot
on
something
and
stumble
or
fall
,
or
to
make
someone
do
this
•
I
tripped
on
the
curb
and
nearly
dropped
the
groceries
.
I
tripped
on
the
curb
and
nearly
dropped
the
groceries
.
•
Watch
your
step
so
you
don't
trip
.
Watch
your
step
so
you
don't
trip
.
Middle
English
trippen
,
from
Old
French
triper
‘
to
tread
,
stamp
’,
of
Germanic
origin
.
noun
an
act
of
stumbling
or
a
momentary
loss
of
balance
while
walking
or
running
•
With
a
sudden
trip
,
the
runner
lost
his
lead
in
the
race
.
With
a
sudden
trip
,
the
runner
lost
his
lead
in
the
race
.
•
His
nervous
trip
onstage
made
the
audience
gasp
.
His
nervous
trip
onstage
made
the
audience
gasp
.
Extension
of
the
verb
sense
‘
to
stumble
’
used
as
a
noun
since
the
16th
century
.
verb
-
trip
,
tripping
,
trips
,
tripped
(
of
a
switch
or
safety
device
)
to
automatically
turn
off
a
circuit
or
piece
of
equipment
,
or
to
make
it
turn
off
•
The
hair
dryer
overloaded
the
circuit
and
the
breaker
tripped
.
The
hair
dryer
overloaded
the
circuit
and
the
breaker
tripped
.
•
Surge
protectors
trip
to
stop
dangerous
voltage
spikes
.
Surge
protectors
trip
to
stop
dangerous
voltage
spikes
.
Extended
technical
sense
from
the
idea
of
a
mechanical
part
being
‘
pushed
out
of
place
’
to
break
a
circuit
,
first
recorded
in
the
early
20th
century
.
noun
an
experience
of
hallucinations
and
altered
perception
caused
by
taking
a
psychedelic
drug
•
He
described
his
first
LSD
trip
as
colorful
and
surreal
.
He
described
his
first
LSD
trip
as
colorful
and
surreal
.
•
Some
travelers
visit
the
rainforest
for
an
ayahuasca
trip
.
Some
travelers
visit
the
rainforest
for
an
ayahuasca
trip
.
Slang
use
from
the
1960s
,
influenced
by
the
idea
of
the
mind
‘
traveling
’
under
drugs
.
description
noun
a
piece
of
spoken
or
written
language
that
tells
what
someone
or
something
is
like
•
Maria
wrote
a
vivid
description
of
the
sunset
in
her
travel
journal
.
Maria
wrote
a
vivid
description
of
the
sunset
in
her
travel
journal
.
•
The
police
officer
asked
the
witness
for
a
description
of
the
thief
.
The
police
officer
asked
the
witness
for
a
description
of
the
thief
.
From
Latin
descriptio
(
a
sketch
,
enumeration
,
representation
),
from
describere
(“
to
describe
”).
noun
the
act
or
process
of
describing
something
•
The
teacher
gave
the
class
fifteen
minutes
for
the
description
of
their
favorite
animal
.
The
teacher
gave
the
class
fifteen
minutes
for
the
description
of
their
favorite
animal
.
•
Good
storytelling
depends
on
the
careful
description
of
characters
’
feelings
.
Good
storytelling
depends
on
the
careful
description
of
characters
’
feelings
.
See
Sense
1
etymology
.
script
noun
the
written
text
of
a
play
,
film
,
radio
programme
,
or
other
performance
,
including
dialogue
and
stage
directions
•
The
actors
gathered
around
the
table
to
read
the
new
movie
script
.
The
actors
gathered
around
the
table
to
read
the
new
movie
script
.
•
I
left
my
script
at
home
and
had
to
borrow
someone
else's
.
I
left
my
script
at
home
and
had
to
borrow
someone
else's
.
Sense
developed
in
the
early
20th
century
as
moving
pictures
became
popular
,
extending
the
idea
of
‘
something
written
’
to
performance
texts
.
noun
a
system
of
written
characters
used
for
a
particular
language
or
style
of
handwriting
•
The
ancient
manuscript
was
written
in
beautiful
Arabic
script
.
The
ancient
manuscript
was
written
in
beautiful
Arabic
script
.
•
When
learning
Japanese
,
students
must
master
three
different
scripts
.
When
learning
Japanese
,
students
must
master
three
different
scripts
.
From
Latin
“
scriptum
”,
meaning
“
something
written
”,
from
the
verb
“
scribere
” (“
to
write
”).
noun
a
small
program
written
in
a
scripting
language
that
automates
tasks
on
a
computer
or
website
•
A
short
Python
script
can
rename
hundreds
of
files
in
seconds
.
A
short
Python
script
can
rename
hundreds
of
files
in
seconds
.
•
She
uploaded
a
login
script
that
automates
the
process
.
She
uploaded
a
login
script
that
automates
the
process
.
Adopted
in
the
1960s
for
short
job-control
files
on
early
computers
,
drawing
on
the
idea
of
actors
performing
written
lines
.
noun
(
informal
)
a
written
prescription
for
medicine
•
The
pharmacist
filled
her
doctor
’
s
script
within
minutes
.
The
pharmacist
filled
her
doctor
’
s
script
within
minutes
.
•
Do
you
have
a
script
for
that
medication
?
Do
you
have
a
script
for
that
medication
?
Clipped
form
of
“
prescription
”,
common
in
U
.
S
.
pharmacies
from
the
mid-20th
century
onward
.
verb
to
write
the
dialogue
and
directions
for
a
play
,
movie
,
advertisement
,
or
other
performance
•
She
was
hired
to
script
the
new
detective
series
.
She
was
hired
to
script
the
new
detective
series
.
•
The
marketing
team
asked
him
to
script
a
catchy
advertisement
.
The
marketing
team
asked
him
to
script
a
catchy
advertisement
.
Verbal
use
recorded
from
the
1930s
,
back-formed
from
the
noun
meaning
‘
performance
text
’.
strip
verb
-
strip
,
stripping
,
strips
,
stripped
to
remove
all
or
most
of
the
covering
,
clothes
,
or
layers
from
something
or
someone
•
The
nurse
asked
the
patient
to
strip
to
the
waist
for
the
examination
.
The
nurse
asked
the
patient
to
strip
to
the
waist
for
the
examination
.
•
Before
painting
,
we
had
to
strip
the
old
wallpaper
from
the
walls
.
Before
painting
,
we
had
to
strip
the
old
wallpaper
from
the
walls
.
From
Old
English
‘
strīepan/strīpan
’,
meaning
to
pluck
or
strip
,
related
to
German
‘
streifen
’.
noun
-
strip
,
stripping
,
strips
,
stripped
a
long
,
narrow
piece
of
land
,
material
,
or
surface
•
He
cut
the
leather
into
thin
strips
to
make
a
bracelet
.
He
cut
the
leather
into
thin
strips
to
make
a
bracelet
.
•
There's
a
grassy
strip
between
the
sidewalk
and
the
road
.
There's
a
grassy
strip
between
the
sidewalk
and
the
road
.
noun
-
strip
,
stripping
,
strips
,
stripped
a
series
of
drawings
in
boxes
that
tell
a
short
story
,
often
printed
in
newspapers
or
online
•
I
read
the
Sunday
comic strip
every
week
.
I
read
the
Sunday
comic strip
every
week
.
•
He
draws
a
webcomic
strip
about
space
explorers
.
He
draws
a
webcomic
strip
about
space
explorers
.
noun
-
strip
,
stripping
,
strips
,
stripped
a
simple
runway
where
aircraft
can
take
off
and
land
,
especially
one
without
many
buildings
•
The
bush
pilot
landed
on
a
dirt
strip
near
the
river
.
The
bush
pilot
landed
on
a
dirt
strip
near
the
river
.
•
Military
engineers
built
a
temporary
landing
strip
in
the
desert
.
Military
engineers
built
a
temporary
landing
strip
in
the
desert
.
verb
-
strip
,
stripping
,
strips
,
stripped
to
take
something
important
away
from
a
person
,
group
,
or
place
•
The
court
decision
could
strip
him
of
his
citizenship
.
The
court
decision
could
strip
him
of
his
citizenship
.
•
Budget
cuts
may
strip
rural
areas
of
essential
bus
services
.
Budget
cuts
may
strip
rural
areas
of
essential
bus
services
.
verb
-
strip
,
stripping
,
strips
,
stripped
to
dismantle
something
,
taking
away
useful
or
valuable
parts
•
Mechanics
will
strip
the
old
engine
for
spare
parts
.
Mechanics
will
strip
the
old
engine
for
spare
parts
.
•
Thieves
stripped
the
abandoned
house
of
copper
wiring
.
Thieves
stripped
the
abandoned
house
of
copper
wiring
.
verb
-
strip
,
stripping
,
strips
,
stripped
to
take
off
one
’
s
clothes
,
especially
as
a
performance
or
in
a
sexually
suggestive
way
•
The
dancer
began
to
strip
on
stage
to
lively
music
.
The
dancer
began
to
strip
on
stage
to
lively
music
.
•
He
lost
a
bet
and
had
to
strip
down
to
his
shorts
at
the
beach
.
He
lost
a
bet
and
had
to
strip
down
to
his
shorts
at
the
beach
.
Sense
dating
from
early
20th-century
burlesque
shows
,
evolving
into
modern
‘
striptease
’.
prescription
noun
a
written
order
from
a
doctor
telling
a
patient
which
medicine
to
take
and
how
to
take
it
•
The
doctor
handed
Maria
a
prescription
for
antibiotics
after
the
examination
.
The
doctor
handed
Maria
a
prescription
for
antibiotics
after
the
examination
.
•
Without
my
glasses
,
I
couldn't
read
the
small
print
on
the
prescription
.
Without
my
glasses
,
I
couldn't
read
the
small
print
on
the
prescription
.
From
Latin
praescriptiō
,
meaning
‘
written
before
’.
Originally
referred
to
legal
written
directions
,
later
used
for
medical
orders
.
noun
a
medicine
that
you
can
only
get
from
a
pharmacy
when
a
doctor
has
approved
it
•
The
pharmacist
told
Liam
his
prescription
would
be
ready
in
ten
minutes
.
The
pharmacist
told
Liam
his
prescription
would
be
ready
in
ten
minutes
.
•
After
surgery
,
the
doctor
gave
her
a
strong
painkiller
prescription
.
After
surgery
,
the
doctor
gave
her
a
strong
painkiller
prescription
.
noun
a
suggestion
or
plan
that
is
intended
to
solve
a
problem
or
improve
a
situation
•
The
report
offered
a
clear
prescription
for
reducing
traffic
in
the
city
.
The
report
offered
a
clear
prescription
for
reducing
traffic
in
the
city
.
•
Experts
disagree
on
the
best
economic
prescription
for
inflation
.
Experts
disagree
on
the
best
economic
prescription
for
inflation
.
noun
in
law
,
the
gaining
or
loss
of
a
right
because
a
certain
period
of
time
has
passed
•
The
family
claimed
the
land
by
prescription
after
farming
it
for
decades
.
The
family
claimed
the
land
by
prescription
after
farming
it
for
decades
.
•
The
crime
was
no
longer
prosecutable
because
the
statute
of
prescription
had
expired
.
The
crime
was
no
longer
prosecutable
because
the
statute
of
prescription
had
expired
.