big vs hip

big

adj
  • Mature, conscientious, principled; generous. 

  • Important or significant. 

  • Popular. 

  • Large with young; pregnant; swelling; ready to give birth or produce. 

  • Enthusiastic (about). 

  • Fat. 

  • Adult; (of a child) older. 

  • Populous. 

  • Used as an intensifier, especially of negative-valence nouns 

  • Of great size, large. 

  • Operating on a large scale, especially if therefore having undue or sinister influence. 

  • Well-endowed, possessing large breasts in the case of a woman or a large penis in the case of a man. 

  • Old, mature. Used to imply that somebody is too old for something, or acting immaturely. 

adv
  • In a large amount or to a large extent. 

  • On a large scale, expansively. 

  • You've got to think big to succeed at Amalgamated Plumbing. 

  • In a boasting manner. 

  • Hard. 

  • In a loud manner. 

noun
  • The participant in ageplay who acts out the older role. 

  • An important or powerful person; a celebrity; a big name. 

  • A initiated member of a sorority who acts as a mentor to a new member (the little). 

  • One or more kinds of barley, especially six-rowed barley. 

  • The big leagues, big time. 

hip

adj
  • Aware, informed, up-to-date, trendy. 

intj
  • An exclamation to invoke a united cheer: hip hip hooray. 

noun
  • The fruit of a rose. 

  • The inclined external angle formed by the intersection of two sloping roof planes. 

  • The outward-projecting parts of the pelvis and top of the femur and the overlying tissue. 

  • In a bridge truss, the place where an inclined end post meets the top chord. 

verb
  • To dislocate or sprain the hip of, to fracture or injure the hip bone of (a quadruped) in such a manner as to produce a permanent depression of that side. 

  • To inform, to make knowledgeable. 

  • To throw (one's adversary) over one's hip ("cross-buttock"). 

  • To use one's hips to bump into someone. 

  • To make with a hip or hips, as a roof. 

How often have the words big and hip occurred in a corpus of books? (source: Google Ngram Viewer )