Crossword clues for tips
tips
- Advice from pros
- You take them at your own risk
- Words of advice, perhaps
- Word on a jar
- What waiters want
- What many service providers work for
- Warns, with ''off''
- Waitstaff rewards
- Waitress's wages, largely
- Waitperson's rewards
- Waiting rewards
- Waiters' salary supplements
- Waiters appreciate them
- Waiter's collections
- Wage augmentation
- Video game walkthrough fodder
- Valet parker's pocketful
- Useful suggestions
- Tout's offerings
- Things waiters wait for
- Things I give 10% for, no matter what(I had to work for my money)
- They're usually left after dinner
- They're reported on the IRS's Form 4137
- They might be pooled
- They may be pooled
- They get chalked up by hustlers
- These go in bar band jar
- Tab add-ons
- Street musician's income
- Sometimes underreported income
- Some wait for them
- Sirloin serving
- Singles at bars, e.g.?
- Shows instability
- Shows appreciation with money
- Shows appreciation for good service
- Shared insights from a music vet
- Server's rewards
- Rewards for restaurant servers
- Restaurant collection
- Remembers the waiter
- Pro's suggestions
- Pool-cue parts
- Pool cue parts
- Piano jar fill
- Part of a waiter's income
- Paddock whispers
- Offerings to bettors
- Much of a salon worker's income
- Much of a bellhop's income
- Money that valet parkers receive from customers
- Money sometimes left in a jar for employees
- Many servicepeople work for them
- Leads, to sleuths
- Jar filler
- Jar contents at a restaurant
- Insiders' suggestions
- Informant's tidbits
- Income for waiters
- Income for servers
- Income for parking valets
- Hot info
- Helpful hacks
- Glancing blows
- Gestures of acknowledgment
- Fillers of some jars
- Extra amounts for bartenders and valets
- Doesn't stiff
- Detective's leads
- Clues in, with "off"
- Check additions
- Certain extremities
- Café-table leavings
- Busboys' bonuses
- Bits of inside info
- Bistro-table leavings
- Bills on tables, maybe
- Bellhops' rewards
- Bellhop's rewards
- Asparagus tidbits
- Arrow points
- Amounts given to waiters
- Additions to tabs
- "Lucky Lady in the fifth" and the like
- __ the scales
- Advice from a pro
- Much of a waiter's income
- Loses verticality
- Pointers
- Often underreported income
- Manual offerings
- Rewards for waiting?
- Good things that come to those who wait
- Q followers?
- See 21-Across
- Peaks
- Sirloin parts
- Helpful hints
- Diner jarful
- Thanks monetarily
- Reward for waiting?
- Server's collection
- Inclines
- Service rewards
- Edges at the track
- Bread in a jar, perhaps
- A large part of a waitress's income
- A lot of a car valet's income
- Large part of a waiter's income
- Much of a waitress's income
- Word on a bar worker's jar
- Things worth waiting for?
- Some keep waiting for them
- They're often off the books
- Bar jarful
- Sign on a jar at a bar
- Tout's stock-in-trade
- Server's bread and butter
- Waiter's concern
- Aids for police detectives
- Overturns
- Extremities
- Waiter's take
- Apexes
- Leaves a pourboire
- Points
- Track info
- Tout's suggestions
- They're hot at Belmont
- Apices
- Tilts
- ___ off (warns)
- Asparagus ___
- Douceurs
- Finger ends
- Paddock info
- Certain foul balls
- Behaves like a tout
- Gratuities
- Clues note Psyche and suchlike, for starters
- Waiters' gratuities
- Inside information
- Bits of advice
- Words to the wise
- Ones left behind?
- Mountain peaks
- Waiter's rewards
- Tout's output
- Money left on the table
- Helpful information
- Bill add-ons
- What waiters wait for
- Waiter's mainstay
- Pieces of advice
- Handy hints
- Cops run them down
- Words of advice
- Waiter's income, partially
- Voluntary offerings
- They may be in a jar
- They come to those who wait
- Some jar deposits
- Sirloin servings
- Rewards good service
- Helpful info
- Expense-account item
- Contents of some jars
- Capsizes, with "over"
- Bonuses for good service
Wiktionary
Wikipedia
Tips may refer to:
- Tip (gratuity), extra payment left by guests
- Tips Industries, an Indian film production company
- Gambling suggestions made by a Tipster
- A landfill site can also be known as a "tip" or "rubbish tip"
- Ernest Oscar Tips, a Belgian aviation designer and entrepreneur
TIPS as an acronym may refer to:
- Operation TIPS, Terrorism Information and Prevention System
- Tether Physics and Survivability Experiment, a satellite to experiment with space tether
- Theory of Inventive Problem Solving, see TRIZ
- Thermally Induced Phase Separation, a common method used in scaffold design for tissue engineering
- Training for Intervention ProcedureS, Alcohol server training
- Transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt, an artificial channel within the liver
- Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities, a set of Bonds issued by the U.S. Treasury
- Trends in Pharmacological Sciences or Trends (journals), a series of scientific journals
- Triisopropylsilyl, a type of silyl ether
- Turkish Institute for Police Studies, University of North Texas
Usage examples of "tips".
Manner in which radicles bend when they encounter an obstacle in the soil--Vicia faba, tips of radicles highly sensitive to contact and other irritants--Effects of too high a temperature--Power of discriminating between objects attached on opposite sides--tips of secondary radicles sensitive--Pisum, tips of radicles sensitive--Effects of such sensitiveness in overcoming geotropism--Secondary radicles--Phaseolus, tips of radicles hardly sensitive to contact, but highly sensitive to caustic and to the removal of a slice--Tropaeolum--Gossypium--Cucurbita--Raphanus--Aesculus, tip not sensitive to slight contact, highly sensitive to caustic--Quercus, tip highly sensitive to contact--Power of discrimination--Zea, tip highly sensitive, secondary radicles--Sensitiveness of radicles to moist air--Summary of chapter.
The solution was allowed to evaporate, until it became so thick that it set hard in two or three seconds, and it never injured the tissues, even the tips of tender radicles, to which it was applied.
The tips of the radicles were placed so as just to touch the upper end of the glassplates, and, as they grew downwards they pressed lightly, owing to geotropism, on the smoked surfaces, and left tracks of their course.
Aesculus, and the tracks left by the tips of four radicles of the present plant, whilst growing downwards, were photographed as transparent objects.
Moreover, a close examination of almost every one of the tracks clearly showed that the tips in their downward course had alternately pressed with greater or less force on the plates, and had sometimes risen up so as nearly to leave them for short intervals.
In four cases the tracks left were almost straight, but the tips had pressed sometimes with more and sometimes with less force on the glass, as shown by the varying thickness of the tracks and by little bridges of soot left across them.
As the arched hypocotyl grew upwards it tended to draw up the whole seed, and the peg necessarily rubbed against both tips, but did not hold either down.
This was ascertained by measuring the distance between the tips of the cotyledons of four seedlings at midday and at night.
When small drops of the shellac were placed on the tips without any card, they set into hard little beads, and these acted like any other hard object, causing the radicles to bend to the opposite side.
We may therefore infer that any cause which renders the growth of the radicles either slower or more rapid than the normal rate, lessens or annuls the sensibility of their tips to contact.
In ten instances, radicles which had curved away from a square of card or other object attached to their tips, straightened themselves to a certain extent, or even completely, in the course of from one to two days from the time of attachment.
These after being touched with thick gumwater, were placed on the tips of eleven radicles.
Some trials were next made by irritating the tips without any object being left in contact with them.
The tips of two other radicles were rubbed in the same manner for 15 seconds with a little round twig, two others for 30 seconds, and two others for 1 minute, but without any effect being produced.
These results led us to pursue the experiment, and 18 radicles, which had grown vertically downwards in damp air, had one side of their conical tips sliced off with a razor.