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4-letter words that end in ip

  • blip — A blip is a small spot of light, sometimes occurring with a short, high-pitched sound, which flashes on and off regularly on a piece of equipment such as a radar screen.
  • chip — Chips are long, thin pieces of potato fried in oil or fat and eaten hot, usually with a meal.
  • clip — A clip is a small device, usually made of metal or plastic, that is specially shaped for holding things together.
  • cmip — Common Management Information Protocol
  • coip — Conferencing over IP
  • crip — a term used to refer to a person who is partially or totally unable to use one or more limbs.
  • drip — to let drops fall; shed drops: This faucet drips.
  • flip — to toss or put in motion with a sudden impulse, as with a snap of a finger and thumb, especially so as to cause to turn over in the air: to flip a coin.
  • foip — Fax over IP
  • glip — (military, transitive) To bomb a bridge, particularly with a technique developed by the 490th Missile Squadron during World War II.
  • grip — the act of grasping; a seizing and holding fast; firm grasp.
  • gzip — (tool, compression)   GNU compression utility. Gzip reduces the size of the named files using Lempel-Ziv LZ77 compression. Whenever possible, each file is replaced by one with the filename extension ".gz". Compressed files can be restored to their original form using gzip -d or gunzip or zcat. The Unix "compress" utility is patented (by two separate patents, in fact) and is thus shunned by the GNU Project since it is not free software. They have therefore chosen gzip, which is free of any known software patents and which tends to compress better anyway. All compressed files in the GNU anonymous FTP area (gnu.org/pub/gnu) are in gzip format and their names end in ".gz" (as opposed to "compress"-compressed files, which end in ".Z"). Gzip can uncompress "compress"-compressed files and "pack" files (which end in ".z"). The decompression algorithms are not patented, only compression is. The gzip program is available from any GNU archive site in shar, tar, or gzipped tar format (for those who already have a prior version of gzip and want faster data transmission). It works on virtually every Unix system, MS-DOS, OS/2 and VMS.
  • ifip — 1. International Federation for Information Processing. 2. A subset of ALGOL.
  • kuip — Kernel User Interface Package
  • quip — a clever or witty remark or comment.
  • ship — a romantic relationship between fictional characters, especially one that people discuss, write about, or take an interest in, whether or not the romance actually exists in the original book, show, etc.: popular ships in fan fiction.
  • skip — to move in a light, springy manner by bounding forward with alternate hops on each foot.
  • slip — to move, flow, pass, or go smoothly or easily; glide; slide: Water slips off a smooth surface.
  • snip — to cut with a small, quick stroke, or a succession of such strokes, with scissors or the like.
  • trip — a group of animals, as sheep, goats, or fowl; flock.
  • ukip — United Kingdom Independence Party: a political party founded in 1993 to seek Britain's withdrawal from the European Union
  • voip — Voice over IP
  • whip — to beat with a strap, lash, rod, or the like, especially by way of punishment or chastisement; flog; thrash: Criminals used to be whipped for minor offenses.
  • xwip — X Window Interface for Prolog. A package for Prologs following the Quintus foreign function interface (e.g. SICStus Prolog). XWIP provides a (low-level) Xlib-style interface to X. The current version was developed and tested on SICStus 0.7 and MIT X11 R5 under SunOS 4.1.1. It should be adaptable to many other Unix configurations. Version 0.6.

On this page, we collect all 4-letter words ending in IP. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 4-letter word that ends in IP to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles.

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