0 to press cloth, paper, etc. into small folds along its edges, or to press hair into a series of folds using a heated device
1 to press something into small folds or curves:
She had her hair crimped.
Crimp edges of the hamburgers all around to hold in the cheese when it melts and begins to run.
I think that pink silk would be perfectly suitable and real becoming if I crimped my hair and had a black lace bonnet to wear with it.
She even, as the matrons noticed, took to crimping her hair.
The fibre curvature measurements may assist in the interpretation of the crimp character data.
In the present work, fibre curvature is associated with staple crimp frequency.
I hope she will resolve this tension, for it crimps her style.
They are ' gravely deprived, crimped and mean ' (436).
Thus while staple crimp character was affected by frequency of shearing, the actual physical impact on the curvature of individual mohair fibres was barely detectable.