| rip | | |
| blood, profligate, rake, rakehell, rip, roue | (n.) | a dissolute man in fashionable society. |
| rent, rip, snag, split, tear | (n.) | an opening made forcibly as by pulling apart.; "there was a rip in his pants"; "she had snags in her stockings" |
| countercurrent, crosscurrent, rip, riptide, tide rip | (n.) | a stretch of turbulent water in a river or the sea caused by one current flowing into or across another current. |
| rent, rip, split | (n.) | the act of rending or ripping or splitting something.; "he gave the envelope a vigorous rip" |
| pull, rend, rip, rive | (v.) | tear or be torn violently.; "The curtain ripped from top to bottom"; "pull the cooked chicken into strips" |
| rip | (v.) | move precipitously or violently.; "The tornado ripped along the coast" |
| rip | (v.) | cut (wood) along the grain. |
| rip | (v.) | criticize or abuse strongly and violently.; "The candidate ripped into his opponent mercilessly" |
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