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Jul. 19th, 2010 03:05 pm![[identity profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/openid.png)
A little late (and I may have missed last week - sorry! I've been suffering a never-ending cold).
Leep [leep]
verb
Definition
To wash with cow-dung and water.
Etymology
Anglo-Indian, from Urdu (Hindi) lipna.
First seen
1895 - Kipling, Second Jungle Book, page 80: The big wicker~chest, leeped with cow-dung.
Usage
When I first came across this word, I thought that the OED had a different definition to the term wash than I had. I was distressed to find, looking up wash, that they have the same idea of what wash means that I do. I vowed that I would never allow myself to find out nice my work shirts would be if I decided to leep them instead of the more modern way of cleaning them.
Leep [leep]
verb
Definition
To wash with cow-dung and water.
Etymology
Anglo-Indian, from Urdu (Hindi) lipna.
First seen
1895 - Kipling, Second Jungle Book, page 80: The big wicker~chest, leeped with cow-dung.
Usage
When I first came across this word, I thought that the OED had a different definition to the term wash than I had. I was distressed to find, looking up wash, that they have the same idea of what wash means that I do. I vowed that I would never allow myself to find out nice my work shirts would be if I decided to leep them instead of the more modern way of cleaning them.