0 to (cause to) move so that one side is higher than another side:
1 to pour a substance from one container into another or onto a surface:
2 to cover the end of something pointed with a liquid, a colour, etc.:
3 to give someone who has provided you with a service an extra amount of money to thank them:
[ + two objects ] They tipped the waiter £5.
4 to say that someone is likely to be successful or achieve something:
[ + to infinitive ] Davis is being tipped to win the championship.
5 to get rid of rubbish by putting it in a place where it should not be:
In this way, the approximation to the tip output excludes the contributions from the truncated high-order modes.
The application of a very sharp needle with a tip in atomic dimensions is used to scan material surfaces very closely.
The sheath was advanced across the previous area of obstruction and positioned with the tip in the new right atrium.
It states that, near the tip of the crack, the leading order of the expansion of the elastic field is symmetric.
Piezo-electric scanning can be achieved by moving the sample holder or the tip itself.
There is no research work on the touch sensor which can be set easily at the tip of the pipette.
In addition, one of the engines drove a high-pressure fan that forced foul air from the refuse on the tipping platform across the fire.
In this sense, the circulation about the aerofoil can be related to the vorticity released into the flow near the tips of the wing.