be-piped
See also: bepiped
English
Adjective
be-piped (not comparable)
- Alternative form of bepiped
- 1845 August 13, “The Preparations at Bonn”, in The Standard, number 6565:
- In the streets, also, the variety of dresses and costumes of the inhabitants of almost every city and country to Europe, who have come to do homage to the memory of the great maestro, adds to the peculiarity of the scene; and the flaunting lace caps of the women, the showy uniforms of the civil and military authorities, and the be-capped, be-piped, and be-ringletted Bürchen[-]classe who throng the streets, give the whole the appearance of a carnival on a grand scale.
- 1884 December 19, Western Mail, number 4869, page 2:
- From the fore-cabin window of the vessel, laden with a cargo supplied to Government contract, there peer the heads of quite a crowd of clerks, be-spectacled and be-piped, warranted to live on for ever on nothing a year.
- 1908 June 9, “Student Stays on Cover, but His Classy Pipe Is Barred”, in The Detroit Free Press, volume 73, number 258, Detroit, Mich., page 6:
- The color drawing in question is a clever production by Harold Spain, one of the students, and in anticipation of a big sale, circulars with another drawing of a be-piped student were distributed about the building.
- 1936 February 7, “Diary of Arizona; Taxicab Driver”, in The Arizona Daily Star, volume 95, number 38, Tucson, Ariz., page three:
- H’englishman, be-piped, spatted, to th’ bloomin’ h’airport.
- 1954 April 27, “Pipe-Smoking Women”, in The Sault Daily Star, volume 43, number 36, Sault Ste. Marie, Ont., page 4:
- That there is nothing new in pipe-smoking for women is made clear by the following article from the Weekly Scotsman, which gives this description of the be-piped harridans of the British Isles: […]