shippy
See also: Shippy
English
Etymology
Adjective
shippy (comparative shippier, superlative shippiest)
- Related to or characteristic of a ship (vessel).
- 1899, William Dean Howells, quoted in Michael Anesko, Letters, Fictions, Lives: Henry James and William Dean Howells (1997), page 349:
- Well, we have been here since Mid-June, beside a reefy and shippy shore, with sails by day and lamps by night, all over the water, and a sunrise and sunset gun from an obsolete fort across the harbor.
- 1982, Eileen Simpson, Poets in Their Youth: A Memoir, page 11:
- About the interior decorations, however, there was nothing shippy.
- 2008, H. A. Covington, The Brigade, page 127:
- […] there were always vehicles parked there, and anyone driving by will think we're just tourists gawping at all the shippy stuff.
- 1899, William Dean Howells, quoted in Michael Anesko, Letters, Fictions, Lives: Henry James and William Dean Howells (1997), page 349:
- (fandom slang) Related to, characteristic of, or supporting a romantic relationship (ship) between characters.
- 1999 January 7, [email protected], “Re: X-Files Ratings For Terms of Endearment”, in alt.tv.x-files[2] (Usenet):
- One thing that can be inferred is that "Ghosts", a very shippy episode, apparently didn't scare (pun intended) any viewers away.
Antonyms
- noromoish (X-Files fandom)