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Blip vs Clip - What's the difference?

blip | clip |

As nouns the difference between blip and clip

is that blip is a small dot registered on electronic equipment, such as a radar or oscilloscope screen while clip is something which clips or grasps; a device for attaching one object to another.

As verbs the difference between blip and clip

is that blip is to skip over or ignore (with out) while clip is to grip tightly.

blip

English

Noun

(en noun)
  • A small dot registered on electronic equipment, such as a radar or oscilloscope screen.
  • * 1985 , Frederick Forsyth, The Fourth Protocol
  • When the blip began to move up the oscilloscope screen, they followed again.
  • * 2004 , Asaf Degani, Taming HAL: Designing Interfaces Beyond 2001
  • At 6:45 pm, the chief officer saw a blip on the radar, approximately seven nautical miles away.
  • A short sound of a single pitch, usually electronically generated.
  • * 2000 , Ken Norton, Going the Distance
  • Blip ..Blip..Blip..Blip  There was that annoying noise again.
  • * 2002 , Richard Strozzi-Heckler, In Search of the Warrior Spirit: Teaching Awareness Disciplines to the Green Berets
  • The little “blip ” sound that happens when a balloon is shot down becomes a duet with the player. “Blip” “Damn!” “Blip” “Damn!”
  • A brief and usually minor aberration or deviation from what is expected or normal.
  • * 2003 , Brett Grodeck, The First Year - HIV: An Essential Guide for the Newly Diagnosed
  • There's a chance this is just a viral blip , an intermittent spike of low-level virus that just happens in people on successful HIV treatment.
  • * 2003 , Dany Spencer Adams, Lab Math: A Handbook of Measurements, Calculations, and Other Quantitative Skills for Use at the Bench
  • As a cell moves through the aperture it causes a blip (a brief change) in the voltage when the nonconductive cell briefly displaces the conductive medium.

    Verb

    (en-verb)
  • To skip over or ignore (with out ).
  • * 1990 , Hearing Before the Special Committee on Aging, United States Senate, Defining the Frontier: A Policy Challenge
  • If we look, for example, at Laramie County, with a population density of 26.8 per square mile, if you blipped out Cheyenne, Laramie County would change significantly.
  • * 1996 , John Dunning, The Bookman's Wake
  • He listened but his mind heard only words and blipped out meanings.
  • To change state abruptly, such as between off and on or dark and light, sometimes implying motion.
  • * 2003 , Dennis Lehane, Mystic River
  • And yet, they pulsed and glowed and shimmied and flared and stared at you, just like now—staring in at his and Whitey's own lights as they blipped past on the expressway....
  • * 2005 , Craig Lansford, Tales from Salome: Broken Angel
  • The screen blipped out as the connection was terminated.... A few seconds passed before the screen again blipped to life.

    clip

    English

    Etymology 1

    From (etyl) clyppan, from (etyl) .

    Verb

    (clipp)
  • To grip tightly.
  • To fasten with a clip.
  • Please clip the photos to the pages where they will go.
  • (archaic) To hug, embrace.
  • * Shakespeare
  • O that Neptune's arms, who clippeth thee about, / Would bear thee from the knowledge of thyself.
    {{quote-Fanny Hill, part=5 , When we had sufficiently graduated our advances towards the main point, by toying, kissing, clipping , feeling my breasts, now round and plump, feeling that part of me I might call a furnace-mouth, from the prodigious intense heat his fiery touches had rekindled there, my young sportsman, embolden'd by every freedom he could wish, wantonly takes my hand, and carries it to that enormous machine of his}}
  • (slang) To collect signatures, generally with the use of a clipboard.
  • Noun

    (en noun)
  • Something which clips or grasps; a device for attaching one object to another.
  • Use this clip to attach the check to your tax form.
  • (slang) An unspecified but normally understood as rapid speed or pace.
  • She reads at a pretty good clip .
  • (obsolete) An embrace.
  • (Sir Philip Sidney)
  • A frame containing a number of bullets which is intended to be inserted into the magazine of a firearm to allow for rapid reloading.
  • A projecting flange on the upper edge of a horseshoe, turned up so as to embrace the lower part of the hoof; a toe clip or beak.
  • (Youatt)
    Derived terms
    * binder clip * paper clip

    Etymology 2

    Probably from (etyl) klippa.

    Verb

  • To cut, especially with scissors or shears as opposed to a knife etc.
  • She clipped my hair with her scissors.
    Please clip that coupon out of the newspaper.
  • * Macaulay
  • sentenced to have his ears clipped
  • To curtail; to cut short.
  • * Shakespeare
  • All my reports go with the modest truth; / No more nor clipped , but so.
  • * Jonathan Swift
  • In London they clip their words after one manner about the court, another in the city, and a third in the suburbs.
  • (dialectal, informal) To strike with the hand.
  • I'll clip ye round the lugs!
  • (American football) An illegal tackle: Throwing the body across the back of an opponent's leg or hitting him from the back below the waist while moving up from behind unless the opponent is a runner or the action is in close line play.
  • (signal processing) to cut off a signal level at a certain maximum value
  • (computer graphics) To discard (an occluded part of a model or scene) rather than waste resources on rendering it.
  • Noun

  • Something which has been clipped; a small portion of a larger whole, especially an excerpt of a larger work.
  • They played a clip of last night's debate.
  • An act of clipping, such as a haircut.
  • I went into the salon to get a clip .
  • The product of a single shearing of sheep; a season's crop of wool.
  • (uncountable, informal) A speed or pace.
  • He was walking at a pretty good clip and I was out of breath trying to keep up.
  • (uncountable, Geordie) The condition of something, its state.
  • Deeky the clip of that aad wife ower thor!
  • (informal) A blow with the hand.
  • Give him a clip round the ear!

    References

    * * National Football League (2007). Official Rules of the National Football League 2007 . Triumph Books.

    Anagrams

    * English contranyms ----