0 a small spot of light, sometimes with a short, sharp sound, that appears on a computer screen --
Last month's rise in inflation was described by the chancellor as only a blip.
1 an unexpected and unusual condition that is usually temporary: --
2 a short period of time in which a situation gets worse before improving: --
With one or two blips, which could doubtlessly be investigated further, one finds great consistency of relatively low numbers in each area in proportion to population.
Although there are blips, such as 1979 and 1992, we are in something of almost a post-democratic age, when voting is not the priority that it once was.
The shares blipped up in price.
He blips the critical doctors as his boss blips all her critics with her handbag.
Does he agree that falling output and rising unemployment are not just blips but signs of a recession affecting every kind of industry and every kind of worker?
We have heard about blips and such matters.
A year or six months ago his speech were full of blips.
Although there are occasional blips, the result is a steady decline in the number of beds blocked or delayed discharges.