English

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Etymology

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mis- +‎ trip

Verb

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mistrip (third-person singular simple present mistrips, present participle mistripping, simple past and past participle mistripped)

  1. To trip by mistake.
    • 1994, Requirements for WOCE Hydrographic Programme Data Reporting, page 38:
      For example, individual bottles may leak chronically, may contaminate the samples being taken, e.g. chlorofluorocarbons, or may consistently mistrip or otherwise malfunction.
    • 1998, Proceedings of the American Power Conference, page 114:
      However, relay C mistripped for one backward fault case, and showed unexpected performance for forward faults, as it tripped faster for a fault at 17% along the line than for a close-in fault.
    • 1998, Peter F. Worcester, Report on the Office of Naval Research Long-Range Propagation Workshop, page 3:
      The results were compared with the CTD salinity in order to verify that the rosette bottle did not mistrip or leak.

Noun

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mistrip (countable and uncountable, plural mistrips)

  1. The act of mistripping or an instance of mistripping.
    • 1980, British Power Farmer and Agricultural Engineer - Volume 59, page 97:
      This system takes out all the guesswork, when for example, a mistrip occurs and the drill has to be tripped in a second time.
    • 1984, International Atomic Energy Agency, Nuclear Power Plant Instrumentation and Control: A Guidebook, page 350:
      At present, it has a 2/3 logic base, which may be subject to mistrip, as it is switched to the trip mode during test or maintenance.
    • 1994, Requirements for WOCE Hydrographic Programme Data Reporting, page 34:
      In some cases it may be subsequently discovered that failure to trip may be a mistrip with the next bottle closing at the depth of the empty bottle.