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English[]

Pronunciation[]

  • IPA: /lɒp/
    Rhymes: -ɒp

Etymology 1[]

From Old English loppe, Old Norse *hloppa. Confer Swedish loppa.

Noun[]

Singular
Lop

Plural
{{{1}}}

Lop ({{{1}}})

  1. Template:Geordie A flea.
    Hadway wi ye man, ye liftin wi lops

References[]

  • Template:R:New Geordie Dictionary 1987
  • Template:R:Northeast Dialect 2005
  • Lop in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913
  • Template:R:Online Etymology Dictionary
  • Template:R:Dobson & Irwin Newcastle 1970
  • Template:R:Northumberland 1880
  • Template:R:Palgrave
  • Template:R:Todds Geordie 1977

Etymology 2[]

From Middle English loppe.

Verb[]

Infinitive
to Lop

Third person singular
lopp

Simple past
-

Past participle
-

Present participle
ed

to Lop (third-person singular simple present lopp, present participle ed, simple past and past participle -)

  1. To cut off as the top or extreme part of anything, especially to prune a small limb off a shrub or tree.

References[]

  • Template:R:Online Etymology Dictionary

Anagrams[]

  • lop,
  • PLO
  • pol, POL

Hungarian[]

Etymology[]

Of unknown origin.

Pronunciation[]

Verb[]

Lop

  1. to steal, to shoplift

Descendants[]

  • Bosnian: [[lopov#Template:Bs|lopov]]
  • Croatian: [[lopov#Template:Hr|lópov]]
  • Serbian: [[lopov#Template:Sr|lopov]]
  • Slovene: lópov

Occitan[]

Pronunciation[]

Noun[]

Lop m. (plural lops; feminine loba; feminine plural lobas)

  1. wolf

br:lop cs:lop de:lop fa:lop fr:lop ko:lop io:lop it:lop lo:lop lt:lop hu:lop ml:lop nl:lop oc:lop pl:lop ru:lop scn:lop fi:lop te:lop tr:lop vi:lop vo:lop zh:lop

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