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Webster 1913 Edition
Cop
The tops of many hills.
Webster 1828 Edition
Cop
COP
,Definition 2024
cop
cop
English
Noun
cop (plural cops)
- (obsolete) A spider.
Etymology 2
Uncertain. Perhaps from Old English copian (“to plunder; pillage; steal”); or possibly from Middle French caper (“to capture”), from Latin capere (“to seize, to grasp”); or possibly from Dutch kapen (“to seize, to hijack”), from West Frisian kapia (“to take away”), from Old Frisian kapia (“to buy”). Compare also Middle English copen (“to buy”), from Middle Dutch copen.
Verb
cop (third-person singular simple present cops, present participle copping, simple past and past participle copped)
- (transitive, formerly dialect, now informal) to obtain, to purchase (as in drugs), to get hold of, to take.
- 2005, Martin Torgoff, Can't Find My Way Home, Simon & Schuster, page 10:
- Heroin appeared on the streets of our town for the first time, and Innie watched helplessly as his sixteen-year-old brother began taking the train to Harlem to cop smack.
- 2005, Martin Torgoff, Can't Find My Way Home, Simon & Schuster, page 10:
- (transitive) to (be forced to) take; to receive; to shoulder; to bear, especially blame or punishment for a particular instance of wrongdoing.
- When caught, he would often cop a vicious blow from his father
- (transitive, trainspotting, slang) to see and record a railway locomotive for the first time.
- (transitive) to steal.
- (transitive) to adopt.
- No need to cop an attitude with me, junior.
- (intransitive, usually with "to", slang) to admit, especially to a crime.
- I already copped to the murder. What else do you want from me?
- Harold copped to being known as "Dirty Harry".
- 2005, Elmore Leonard, Mr. Paradise, page 295:
- He shot a guy in a bar on Martin Luther King Day and copped to first-degree manslaughter
Translations
Derived terms
Etymology 3
Short for copper (“police officer”), itself from cop (“one who cops”) above, in reference to arresting criminals.
Noun
cop (plural cops)
- (slang, law enforcement) A police officer or prison guard.
Synonyms
- See also Wikisaurus:police officer
Derived terms
Translations
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Etymology 4
Old English cop, copp, from Proto-Germanic *kuppaz (“vault, basin, round object”), from Proto-Indo-European *gu-. Cognate with Dutch kop, German Kopf.
Noun
cop (plural cops)
- (crafts) The ball of thread wound on to the spindle in a spinning machine.
- (obsolete) The top, summit, especially of a hill.
- Drayton
- Cop they used to call / The tops of many hills.
- Drayton
- (obsolete) The crown (of the head); also the head itself. [14th-15th c.]
- The stature is bowed down in age, the cop is depressed.
- A tube or quill upon which silk is wound.
- (architecture, military) A merlon.
Anagrams
References
- "Cop" in Michael Quinion, Ballyhoo, Buckaroo, and Spuds, 2004.
See also
Catalan
Etymology
From Old Catalan colp, from Late Latin colpus (“stroke”), from earlier Latin colaphus.
Noun
cop m (plural cops)
Synonyms
- (time, occasion): vegada
Derived terms
- cop de gràcia
- cop baix
- cop d'estat