[Ads-l] Implicit Antedating of "Hip"
Shapiro, Fred
00001ac016895344-dmarc-request at LISTSERV.UGA.EDU
Tue Feb 3 12:57:33 UTC 2026
Here are two interesting citations I have found:
1899 Huntington (W. Va.) Advertiser 18 Oct. 3/1 (GenealogyBank)
"There was an old fellow named Lipton,
Yacht racing he was hipped on.
For a wind he did pray,
So it came one day,
And that was the day he was whipped on."
1900 News and Courier (Charleston, S.C.) 15 Nov. 8/1 (GenealogyBank)
According to a story which was running about the Tenderloin yesterday the Barnes woman is hipped on hypnotism.
Sometimes the OED will have, as its earliest citation for a term, an "implied" use of the term. The implied use is not placed in square brackets. An example is the cultural-anthropology sense of the word "bonding," where the earliest citation is said by the OED to be "implied in" a use of the words "pair bonding." I believe that the citations above are antedatings of "hip" (OED, verb5. 1932). I also suggest that these citations are implicit antedatings of "hip" (OED, adjective, "Aware, well-informed; in the know," 1904); (Stephen Goranson, 1902); (Fred Shapiro, 1903). To be "hipped on" means "to be made hip."
Fred Shapiro
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