Noun
lip lock (countable and uncountable, plural lip locks)
- Alternative form of liplock
- Long kiss
2008, Ni-Ni Simone, Shortie Like Mine:And I was able to do it without breaking our lip lock.
2014, Dan Frank, 1 Week:Still, she recognized Fred as she drew back from a lingering lip lock planted squarely across Dell's lips.
2014, Jase Robertson, Good Call: Reflections on Faith, Family, and Fowl:I turned and planted a juicy lip lock on her, to which she responded enthusiastically.
- Technique for hooking a fish
2012, Jay Cassell, The Ultimate Guide to Fishing Skills, Tactics, and .Techniques:Fish with teeth or those so heavy that they require more than a lip lock can be handled with a gill-cover grip when subdued at boatside.
Verb
lip lock (third-person singular simple present lip locks, present participle lip locking, simple past and past participle lip locked)
- Alternative form of lip-lock
- To kiss.
1990, Walter Dean Myers, The Mouse rap, page 141:Now I know you're supposed to lip lock in the movies, right?
2004, Steven G. Fullwood, Funny, page 40:For us black folk, I don't care if King Tut got it on with his male servants, or if Benjamin Banneker liked to lip lock with menfolk in between writing all those damn almanacs.
2013, Aeon Sage, Sacrificing Safety: Epilog: Sacrificing Sanity, page 41:When I don't have a boyfriend with which to talk, or to lip lock.
- To hook a fish.
1990, Mark Thiffault, Illustrated Guide to Better Fishing, page 9:Wading angler (above) is about to lip lock a chunky black bass.
2011, R.G. Webb, Walleye, the Moving Target:To lip lock a Fattie on a hook: The sharp end enters the mouth and exits the jaw downward behind the lower lip.