Idioms for lip
Origin of lip
before 1000; Middle English
lip(pe), Old English
lippa; cognate with Dutch
lip, German
Lippe; akin to Norwegian
lepe, Latin
labium
OTHER WORDS FROM lip
lip·less, adjective lip·like, adjective out·lip, verb (used with object), out·lipped, out·lip·ping. un·der·lip, nounWords nearby lip
Definition for button up (2 of 2)
button
[ buht-n ]
/ ˈbʌt n /
noun
verb (used with object)
verb (used without object)
to be capable of being buttoned: This coat buttons, but that one zips.
Origin of button
1275–1325; Middle English
boto(u)n < Anglo-French: rosehip, button, stud; Middle French
boton, equivalent to
boter to
butt3 +
-on noun suffix
OTHER WORDS FROM button
British Dictionary definitions for button up (1 of 3)
button up
verb (tr, adverb)
to fasten (a garment) with a button or buttons
informal
to conclude (business) satisfactorily
buttoned up slang
taciturn; silent and somewhat tense
British Dictionary definitions for button up (2 of 3)
button
/ (ˈbʌtən) /
noun
verb
Derived forms of button
buttoner, noun buttonless, adjective buttony, adjectiveWord Origin for button
C14: from Old French
boton, from
boter to thrust, butt, of Germanic origin; see
butt ³
British Dictionary definitions for button up (3 of 3)
lip
/ (lɪp) /
noun
verb lips, lipping or lipped
See also
lip out
Derived forms of lip
lipless, adjective liplike, adjectiveWord Origin for lip
Old English
lippa; related to Old High German
leffur, Norwegian
lepe, Latin
labium
Medical definitions for button up (1 of 2)
lip
[ lĭp ]
n.
Either of two fleshy folds that surround the opening of the mouth.
A liplike structure bounding or encircling a bodily cavity or groove.
Medical definitions for button up (2 of 2)
button
[ bŭt′n ]
n.
A knoblike structure, device, or lesion.
Idioms and Phrases with button up (1 of 3)
button up
Close securely, fasten, as in The house was all buttoned up, or Button up your coat—it's very cold. [Late 1500s]
Also, button one's lip. Hold one's tongue, keep quiet. For example, Please button your lip about the surprise. A variant of this usage, button one's mouth, dates from the 17th century. [Mid-1800s]
Finish successfully, as in I've got this report all buttoned up. [c. 1940]
Idioms and Phrases with button up (2 of 3)
button
Idioms and Phrases with button up (3 of 3)
lip