ripe
ripe / rīp/ • adj. (of fruit or grain) developed to the point of readiness for harvesting and eating. ∎ (of a cheese or wine) fully matured: a ripe Brie | fig. ripe wisdom. ∎ (of a smell or flavor) rich, intense, or pungent: rich, ripe flavors emanate from this wine. ∎ (of a female fish or insect) ready to lay eggs or spawn. ∎ (ripe for) arrived at the fitting stage or time for (a particular action or purpose): land ripe for development. ∎ (ripe with) full of: a population ripe with discontent. ∎ (of a person's age) advanced: she lived to a ripe old age. ∎ inf. (of a person's language) beyond the bounds of propriety; coarse.PHRASES: the time is ripe a suitable time has arrived: the time was ripe to talk about peace.DERIVATIVES: ripe·ly adv.ripe·ness n.
Ripe
Ripe ★★ 1997 (R)
Fourteen-year-old fraternal twins Violet (Keena) and Rosie (Eagan) decide to make it on their own after their abusive parents are killed in a car crash. They wind up on a derelict southern army base where they're befriended by caretaker Pete (Currie) and M.P. Ken (Brice), who may not have the most innocent of intentions. 93m/C VHS, DVD . Monica Keena, Daisy Eagan, Gordon Currie, Ron Brice, Karen (Lynn) Gorney, Vincent Laresca; D: Mo Ogrodnik; W: Mo Ogrodnik; C: Wolfgang Held; M: Anton Sanko.
ripe
So ripe vb. (arch.) become ripe OE.; make ripe XIV. OE. rīpian = OS. rīpon (Du. rijpen), OHG. rīfēn (G. reifen); superseded gen. by ripen (-EN5) XVI.