bleeping








adjective

  1. (used as a substitute word for one regarded as objectionable): Get that bleeping cat out of here!

noun

  1. a brief, constant beeping sound, usually of a high pitch and generated by an electronic device.
  2. such an electronic sound used to replace a censored word or phrase, as on a television broadcast.
  3. Also blip. (used as a euphemism to indicate the omission or deletion of an obscenity or other objectionable word).

verb (used without object)

  1. (of an electronic device) to emit a series of bleeps as an audible signal, summons, or warning.

verb (used with object)

  1. Also blip. to censor (an obscene, vulgar, or other objectionable word or phrase) from a radio or television broadcast by deleting from the audio signal, leaving a gap or an electronic tone: The word was bleeped out of the comedian’s routine.

noun

  1. a short high-pitched signal made by an electronic apparatus; beep
  2. another word for bleeper

verb

  1. (intr) to make such a noise
  2. (tr) to call (someone) by triggering the bleeper he or she is wearing
n.

“electronic noise,” 1953, imitative.

v.

1957, from bleep (n.); specific sense of “edit a sound over a word deemed unfit for broadcast” is from 1968 (earliest reference seems to be to the “Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour” on U.S. television). Related: Bleeped; bleeping.

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