lisp
noun
- a speech impediment
verb
- speak in lisp
Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /lɪsp/ / /lɪθp/ / /lɪl͡sp/
name
- Alternative form of Lisp.
noun
Etymology: From Middle English lispen, lipsen, wlispen, from Old English *wlispian (attested in āwlyspian (“to lisp”)), from Old English wlisp, wlips (“stammering, lisping”, adjective), from Proto-Germanic *wlispaz (“lisping”), from Proto-Indo-European *wlis-, *wleys- (“rod”), from *wel- (“to turn, roll”). Cognate with Middle Low German wlispen (“to lisp”), Dutch lispen (“to lisp”), German lispeln (“to lisp”), Danish læspe (“to lisp”), Swedish läspa (“to lisp”).
- The act or a habit of lisping.
“He used to have a terrible lisp before going to a speech therapist.”
“It's common for children to speak with a lisp.”
verb
Etymology: From Middle English lispen, lipsen, wlispen, from Old English *wlispian (attested in āwlyspian (“to lisp”)), from Old English wlisp, wlips (“stammering, lisping”, adjective), from Proto-Germanic *wlispaz (“lisping”), from Proto-Indo-European *wlis-, *wleys- (“rod”), from *wel- (“to turn, roll”). Cognate with Middle Low German wlispen (“to lisp”), Dutch lispen (“to lisp”), German lispeln (“to lisp”), Danish læspe (“to lisp”), Swedish läspa (“to lisp”).
- To pronounce the consonant ‘s’ imperfectly; to give ‘s’ and ‘z’ the sounds of ‘th’ (/θ/, /ð/). This is a speech impediment common among children.
“Until the age of 10, Dominic would lisp, but this was fixed by a speech therapist.”
- To speak with imperfect articulation; to mispronounce, such as a child learning to talk.
“As yet a Child, nor yet a Fool to Fame, / I liſp'd in Numbers, for the Numbers came.”
- To speak hesitatingly and with a low voice, as if afraid.
“Lest when my lisping, guilty tongue should halt.”
- to express by the use of simple, childlike language.
“But the fashion spreads deeper and wider; the village is infected and the village green; Amelias and Claras sweep your rooms and cook your dinners, gentle Sophias milk your cows, and if you ask a pretty smiling girl at a cottage door to tell you her name, the rosy lips lisp out Caroline.”
“to speak unto them after their own capacity, and to lisp the words unto them , according as the babes and children of that age might sound them againagain”
- To speak with reserve or concealment; to utter timidly or confidentially.
“to lisp treason”
“"You have done well, sir," said Delwood, calmly, as he placed double the amount of Mrs. Santon's bribe in the Signor's hand; "you have done well, sir; and mark my words,—gold can never relieve a guilty conscience! Go, sir, and see that you lisp not a syllable of this to any one."”