Nix vs Nip - What's the difference?
nix | nip |
(colloquial): nothing.
To make something become nothing; to reject or cancel.
* {{quote-news
, year=2012
, date=June 17
, author=Nathan Rabin
, title=TV: Review: THE SIMPSONS (CLASSIC): “Homer’s Triple Bypass” (season 4, episode 11; originally aired 12/17/1992)
, work=The Onion AV Club
To destroy or eradicate.
A treacherous water-spirit; a nixie.
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A small quantity of something edible or a potable liquor.
To catch and enclose or compress tightly between two surfaces, or points which are brought together or closed; to pinch; to close in upon.
*
To remove by pinching, biting, or cutting with two meeting edges of anything; to clip.
* '>citation
To blast, as by frost; to check the growth or vigor of; to destroy.
To vex or pain, as by nipping; hence, to taunt.
*
A playful bite.
A pinch with the nails or teeth.
Briskly cold weather.
* 1915 , :
A seizing or closing in upon; a pinching; as, in the northern seas, the nip of masses of ice.
A small cut, or a cutting off the end.
A blast; a killing of the ends of plants by frost.
A biting sarcasm; a taunt.
(nautical) A short turn in a rope. Nip and tuck, a phrase signifying equality in a contest. [Low, U.S.]
The place of intersection where one roll touches another in papermaking.
A pickpocket.
*
To make a quick, short journey or errand; usually roundtrip.
As a proper noun nix
is (astronomy) one of the moons of pluto (named 21 june 2006) or nix can be .As an initialism nip is
(us) national immunization program.nix
English
Etymology 1
From (etyl) nix, colloquial form of . More at (l).Noun
(-)Synonyms
* nada * zipVerb
(es)- Nix the last order - the customer walked out.
citation, page= , passage=At work Mr. Burns spies Homer munching complacently on a donut and hisses that each donut Homer shoves into his fat face brings him one donut closer to the poisoned donut Mr. Burns has ordered thrown into the mix as a form of culinary Russian Roulette, only to learn from Smithers that the plant’s lawyers ultimately nixed the poisoned donut plan because “they consider it murder.”}}
References
Etymology 2
Noun
(es)nip
English
(Webster 1913)Etymology 1
From (etyl) .Noun
(en noun)- I’ll just take a nip of that cake.
- He had a nip of whiskey.
Synonyms
* nibble (of food) * See alsoEtymology 2
Diminutive of nipple .Etymology 3
Probably from a form of (etyl) nipen. Cognate with (etyl) ; (etyl) knebti.Verb
(nipp)Noun
(en noun)- The puppy gave his owner’s finger a nip .
- There is a nip''' in the air. It is '''nippy outside.
- The day had only just broken, and there was a nip in the air; but the sky was cloudless, and the sun was shining yellow.
Derived terms
* nip and tuck * nip in the budEtymology 4
Verb
(nipp)- Why don’t you nip down to the grocer’s for some milk?