Suddenly, Mr. Gibney was electrically excited by a shrill shout from Captain Scraggs. Perhaps from the dialectal yip (“to play like a bird”), from Middle English ȝyppe, probably imitative. [1] [2] Tenishev, Edhem (1976), “yip”, in Stroj salárskovo jazyká [Grammar of the Salar], Moscow: Nauka For some people, however, overcoming twists, yips or similar problems requires a longer recycling period, says Youdan. A brindle bulldog, whom Carl had not seen until then, let out a cry and walked towards the scene of the troubles. The poet E. Y. “Yip” Harburg was as provocative as Hammerstein, albeit with a much less serious and fanciful sensibility. Rosete was fully aware of how combat worked on screen before studying with Yip.
Professional golfer Alena Sharp started having “the yips” every time she tried putt. Otherwise, all six would say “Yip, yip, yip” in a loud voice. When Lasso striker Dani Rojas faced the Yips – suddenly unable to nail his normally impeccable penalties – a therapist was called. yip (yips present simple in the third person singular, present participle yipping, simple past participle, and past participle barked) Did you catch the jubilant and shrill yip-yip of the raid or the long-range war cry of the Cheyenne goat? The crowded audience watched him closely, with an occasional yip, but mostly silently.