Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary · 1913

Tipple

Tipple , intransitive verb

[From tip a small end, or a word akin to it; compare Norw. tipla to tipple, to drip, Prov. English tip, tiff, tift, a draught of liquor, dial. German zipfeln to eat and drink in small parts. See Tip a point, and compare Tipsy.]

To drink spirituous or strong liquors habitually; to indulge in the frequent and improper used of spirituous liquors; especially, to drink frequently in small quantities, but without absolute drunkeness.
Few of those who were summoned left their homes, and those few generally found it more agreeable to tipple in alehouses than to pace the streets. — Macaulay

Tipple , transitive verb

1.
To drink, as strong liquors, frequently or in excess.
Himself, for saving charges, A peeled, sliced onions eats, and tipples verjuice. — Dryden
2.
To put up in bundles in order to dry, as hay.

Tipple , noun

Liquor taken in tippling; drink.
Pulque, the national tipple of Mexico. — S. B. Griffin

Tipple , noun

[Compare 3d Tip.]

An apparatus by which loaded cars are emptied by tipping; also, the place where such tipping is done.