pipe

Signification (Anglais)
-
- Meanings relating to a wind instrument.
- Meanings relating to a wind instrument.
- Meanings relating to a wind instrument.
- Meanings relating to a wind instrument.
- Meanings relating to a hollow conduit.
- Meanings relating to a hollow conduit.
- Meanings relating to a hollow conduit.
- (slang) Meanings relating to a hollow conduit.
- Meanings relating to a container.
- Meanings relating to a container.
- Meanings relating to something resembling a tube.
- Meanings relating to something resembling a tube.
- Meanings relating to something resembling a tube.
- Meanings relating to something resembling a tube.
- Meanings relating to something resembling a tube.
- (colloquial) Meanings relating to something resembling a tube.
- Meanings relating to computing.
- (slang) Meanings relating to computing.
- Meanings relating to computing.
- Meanings relating to a smoking implement.
- (colloquial) Meanings relating to a smoking implement.
- (slang) A telephone.
Concepts
pipe à tabac
tuyau d’orgue
dégorgeoir
tuyautage
comuse
conduit et gaine
tuyau conducteur
tuyau de communication
gaine d’évacuation
tube, tuyau, détroit, canal
veste, tube, tuyau, veston
cheminées, conduites et gaines d’évacuation
pipe, gaule, tuyau, tube
faire passer dans un entonnoir
conduite d’eau
Synonymes
smoking pipe
reed-pipe
water-pipe
top-boot
main pipe
canalis
outer covering
pan-pipe
cigar pipe
hollow cylinder
double skin
hubble-bubble pipe
cold-lap
breccia pipe
ore pipe
ore chimney
ceramic tube
sunflower seeds
clay pipe
Fréquence
Prononcé comme (IPA)
/paɪp/
Étymologie (Anglais)
From Middle English pīpe, pype (“hollow cylinder or tube used as a conduit or container; duct or vessel of the body; musical instrument; financial records maintained by the English Exchequer, pipe roll”), from Old English pīpe (“pipe (musical instrument); the channel of a small stream”), from Proto-West Germanic *pīpā. Reinforced by Vulgar Latin *pīpa, from Latin pipire, pipiare, pipare, from pīpiō (“to chirp, peep”), of imitative origin. Doublet of fife. The “storage container” and “liquid measure” senses are derived from Middle English pīpe (“large storage receptacle, particularly for wine; cask, vat; measure of volume”), from pīpe (above) and Old French pipe (“liquid measure”). In specific contexts, calques similar units of measure such as Portuguese pipa. The verb is from Middle English pīpen, pypyn (“to play a pipe; to make a shrill sound; to speak with a high-pitched tone”), from Old English pīpian (“to pipe”).
Related words
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Notes