- gyp
- Noun. Hassle, bother. E.g."My leg's been giving me gyp since I got kicked during the game." Cf. 'jip'. Informal
English slang and colloquialisms. 2014.
English slang and colloquialisms. 2014.
Gyp — may mean:*A cheat or swindle. (See [http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/gyp wiktionary definition] .) *A slang, pejorative term referencing Gypsies. *A female dog before age 1. *The pen name of Sibylle Gabrielle Marie Antoinette Riqueti de Mirabeau,… … Wikipedia
gyp — [dʒɪp] verb gypped PTandPPX gypping PRESPARTX [transitive] informal to cheat someone: • You paid 50 bucks for those shoes? You were gypped! gyp noun [countable] … Financial and business terms
Gyp — (j[i^]p), n. [Said to be a sportive application of Gr. gy ps a vulture.] A college servant; so called in Cambridge, England; at Oxford called a {scout}. [Cant] [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
gyp — Ⅰ. gyp [1] (also gip) ► NOUN Brit. informal ▪ pain or discomfort. ORIGIN perhaps from gee up (see GEE(Cf. ↑gee)). Ⅱ. gyp [2] informal … English terms dictionary
gyp|sy — «JIHP see», noun, plural sies. 1. Also, gypsy. a person belonging to a group of people whose ancestors lived in India and began to migrate westward through the Middle East about A.D. 1000, arriving in Western Europe in the early 1400 s. Gypsies… … Useful english dictionary
Gyp|sy — «JIHP see», noun, plural sies. 1. Also, gypsy. a person belonging to a group of people whose ancestors lived in India and began to migrate westward through the Middle East about A.D. 1000, arriving in Western Europe in the early 1400 s. Gypsies… … Useful english dictionary
Gyp — (spr. schipp), franz. Schriftstellerin, deren wahrer Name Gabrielle Gräfin Martel de Janville, geborne de Riqueti de Mirabeau lautet, geb. 1850 auf Schloß Koëtsal in der Bretagne, stammt durch ihren Vater aus dem Haus des berühmten Mirabeau und… … Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon
Gyp — (spr. schip), Pseudonym, s. Martel de Janville … Kleines Konversations-Lexikon
gyp — index bunko Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
gyp — (v.) to cheat, swindle, 1889, Amer.Eng., probably derived from the colloquial shortening of GYPSY (Cf. Gypsy) (Cf. gip). Related: Gypped. As a noun, fraudulent action, a cheat, by 1914 … Etymology dictionary
gyp — [v] rip off bamboozle, bilk, cheat, deceive, defraud, dupe, fleece, flimflam*, gip, gull, hoodwink, hustle*, pull something*, rook, scam, stick*, swindle, take for a ride*, trick; concept 59 Ant. be fair, give, offer … New thesaurus