clip the church
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Old English clyppan (“to hug, to clasp”).
Verb
[edit]clip the church (third-person singular simple present clips the church, present participle clipping the church, simple past and past participle clipped the church)
- (historical) To hold hands in an outward-facing ring around a church, an ancient English custom traditionally observed by local communities on Easter Monday, Shrove Tuesday, or the church's saint's day.
- 2015, Felicity Trotman, A Year in the Life of Victorian Britain:
- In its revived form at Edgmond it constitutes part of the annual “feast” of the parish schools. The charity children clipped the church in Birmingham.