lipped

Etymology
From.

Adjective

 * 1) Having a raised lip.
 * 2)  Having some specific type of lip.
 * 3) * 1646,, Steps to the Temple, Sacred Poems. With The Delights of the Muses, “Musick’s Duell,” lines 73-77
 * it seemes a holy quire
 * Founded to th’ name of great Apollo’s lyre,
 * Whose silver-roofe rings with the sprightly notes
 * Of sweet-lipp’d angel-imps, that swill their throats
 * In creame of morning Helicon
 * 1) * 1814,, The Excursion, London: Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme & Brown, Book Four, p. 191,
 * I have seen
 * A curious Child, who dwelt upon a tract
 * Of inland ground, applying to his ear
 * The convolutions of a smooth-lipped Shell;
 * 1) * 1933, George R. Preedy, Double Dallilay (U.S. title Queen’s Caprice), Part 1,
 * The two French girls held the gilt-lipped vases of milk and slowly poured them into the alabaster bath.
 * We met a yellow-lipped woman.
 * 1) * 1933, George R. Preedy, Double Dallilay (U.S. title Queen’s Caprice), Part 1,
 * The two French girls held the gilt-lipped vases of milk and slowly poured them into the alabaster bath.
 * We met a yellow-lipped woman.
 * The two French girls held the gilt-lipped vases of milk and slowly poured them into the alabaster bath.
 * We met a yellow-lipped woman.
 * We met a yellow-lipped woman.

Translations

 * Irish: gobach