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Definition 2024
grasshop
grasshop
English
Noun
grasshop (plural grasshops)
- (now rare, dialectal) grasshopper
- 1839, Henry Hallam, Introduction to the literature of Europe, Volume 2:
- But by the scorched bank-sides i' thy footsteps still I go plodding: Hedge-rows hot do resound with grasshops mournfully squeaking.
- 1868, Henry Wheeler Shaw, Josh Billings on Ice and Other Things:
- I don't want grasshops tew giv [sic] entirely out, not if they are a blessing, but i hav thought (to myself) if they would let the grass and cornstalks be, and pitch onto the burdoks and Canada thissells, i would bet a few dollars on the thissells, jist tew encourage the fight, and wouldn't care a cuss if they both got finally licked.
- 1930, Holbrook Jackson, The Anatomy of Bibliomania - Volume 2 - Page 58:
- The margin was illumined all with golden rails And bees, enpictured with grasshops and wasps, With butterflies and fresh peacock tails, Engloried with flowers and slimy snails; [...]
- 1995, G. Lish, The Quarterly - Volumes 29-30 - Page 18:
- [...] between a gulp and a vomit, when they're looking at you like you're the dumb one so you can't keep on staring at them. Maybe she ate grasshops. Maybe somebody put out food. I put out food.
- 1839, Henry Hallam, Introduction to the literature of Europe, Volume 2:
Etymology 2
Back-formation from grasshopper.
Verb
grasshop (third-person singular simple present grasshops, present participle grasshopping, simple past and past participle grasshopped)
- (transitive, intransitive) To move erratically here and there, like a grasshopper
- 1935, Frank Crowninshield, Vanity Fair - Volume 43, Issue 6 - Page 35:
- It grasshops over the grass and bounds skyward. A matron crams a fresh stick of gum into her mouth and chews her words up with it.
- 2011, Charles Ryan, Phoenix Strike:
- He had to grasshop her, using long poles cabled to a donkey-engine capstan. Slowly, laboriously the ship inched backward, her fireboxes glowing orange-red, the crack of blocks and the booming slam of her engines shattering the night.
- 1935, Frank Crowninshield, Vanity Fair - Volume 43, Issue 6 - Page 35: