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  2. 1. To provide someone or something with a piece of confidential, advance, or inside information: A betrayed gang member tipped off the police. Someone must have tipped the press off about the company's financial troubles. 2. To begin with a jump ball. Used of a basketball game, tournament, or season: The basketball game tips off at 8:00.

  3. to warn someone secretly about something that will happen, so that they can take action or prevent it from happening: [ + that ] Somebody must have tipped the burglars off that the house would be empty. The robber was caught when someone tipped off the police. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases.

  4. 1. To provide someone or something with a piece of confidential, advance, or inside information: A betrayed gang member tipped off the police. Someone must have tipped the press off about the company's financial troubles. 2. To begin with a jump ball. Used of a basketball game, tournament, or season: The basketball game tips off at 8:00.

  5. 4 days ago · tip off. phrasal verb. If someone tips you off, they give you information about something that has happened or is going to happen. Greg tipped police off on his car phone about a suspect drunk driver. [VERB noun PARTICLE] He was arrested two days later after a friend tipped off the FBI.

  6. From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English tip somebody ↔ off phrasal verb to give someone such as the police a secret warning or piece of information, especially about illegal activities The police must have been tipped off. tip somebody off that His contact had tipped him off that drugs were on the premises. about Did you tip him off abou...

  7. phrasal verb. tip somebody off (about something) (informal) to warn somebody about something that is going to happen or has happened, especially something illegal. Three men were arrested after police were tipped off about the raid. An informant tipped me off as to where he was seen last.

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