flip-flop

[flip-flop] /ˈflɪpˌflɒp/
noun
1.
Informal. a sudden or unexpected reversal, as of direction, belief, attitude, or policy.
2.
a backward somersault.
3.
Also called flip-flop circuit. Electronics. an electronic circuit having two stable conditions, each one corresponding to one of two alternative input signals.
4.
any of several similar devices having two alternative states, the change of state being caused by some input signal or by some change of input.
5.
the sound and motion of something flapping, as a wind-blown shutter; a banging to and fro.
6.
any backless, usually open-toed flat shoe or slipper.
7.
a flat, backless rubber sandal, usually secured on the foot by a thong between the first two toes, as for use at a beach, swimming pool, etc.
Compare thong, zori.
8.
(in advertising) a display or presentation, usually on an easel, consisting of a series of pages hinged at the top and flipped over in sequence.
adverb
9.
with repeated sounds and motions, as of something flapping.
verb (used without object), flip-flopped, flip-flopping.
10.
Informal. to make a sudden or unexpected reversal, as of direction, belief, attitude, or policy:
The opposition claimed that the president had flip-flopped on certain issues.
11.
to execute a backward somersault.
12.
to flap; bang to and fro:
The door flip-flopped in the high wind.
Also, flip-flap
[flip-flap] /ˈflɪpˌflæp/ (Show IPA),
(for defs 2, 5, 9, 12), flipflop (for defs 6, 7).
Origin
1655-65
Examples from the web for flip-flop
  • The flip-flop charge, however, is likely to continue.
  • Get a grip on warm poolside fun with this stable, practical and highly fashionable flip-flop.
  • The latest flip-flop has divided the president's critics.
  • The number and distribution of big hurricanes seems to flip-flop between two fairly stable patterns.
  • He tried to put on his flip-flop sandals but, inexplicably, they were too hot to touch.
  • While the weather-is-climate flip-flop never ceases to entertain, it's a little bit too easy.
  • Actually politicians don't flip-flop because they came to a new conclusion about the evidence of the topic.
  • And then there are the flip-flop ads, which show the candidate saying one thing, doing another.
  • Had he disowned his own reform it would have been another insincere flip-flop, and that would have attracted even more criticism.
  • Considering how controversial they've been, it's not surprising that politicians tend to flip-flop on filibuster use.
British Dictionary definitions for flip-flop

flip-flop

noun
1.
a backward handspring
2.
Also called bistable. an electronic device or circuit that can assume either of two stable states by the application of a suitable pulse
3.
(informal, mainly US) a complete change of opinion, policy, etc
4.
a repeated flapping or banging noise
5.
Also called (US, Canadian, Austral, and NZ) thong. a rubber-soled sandal attached to the foot by a thong between the big toe and the next toe
verb (intransitive) -flops, -flopping, -flopped
6.
(informal, mainly US) to make a complete change of opinion, policy, etc
7.
to move with repeated flaps
adverb
8.
with repeated flappings: to go flip-flop
Word Origin
C16: reduplication of flip
Word Origin and History for flip-flop
n.

also flip flop, "thong sandal," by 1972, imitative of the sound of walking in them (flip-flap had been used in various echoic senses, mostly echoic, since 1520s); sense of "complete reversal of direction" dates from 1900.

Flip-flaps, a peculiar rollicking dance indulged in by costermongers, better described as the double shuffle; originally a kind of somersault. [Hotten's Slang Dictionary, 1864]

Slang definitions & phrases for flip-flop

flip-flop

modifier

: flip-flop views and reluctance to confront the issues

noun

A complete reversal of direction; about-face •The primary meaning is ''somersault'': Commodities have been doing flip-flops on the price ladder

verb

: So Kennedy's flip-flopped again (1900+)


flip-flop in Technology
hardware
A digital logic circuit that can be in one of two states which it switches (or "toggles") between under control of its inputs. It can thus be considered as a one bit memory. Three types of flip-flop are common: the SR flip-flop, the JK flip-flop and the D-type flip-flop (or latch).
Early literature refers to the "Eccles-Jordan circuit" and the "Eccles-Jordan binary counter", using two vacuum tubes as the active (amplifying) elements for each bit of information storage. Later implementations using bipolar transistors could operate at up to 20 million state transitions per second as early as 1963.
(1995-11-11)