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English
Etymology
Perhaps from German or Dutch kloppen (“to hit, knock”), from Middle Dutch cloppen (“to make a clopping sound”), of onomatopoeic origin. See also clap.
Pronunciation
Noun
clop (plural clops)
- (onomatopoeia) The sound of a horse's shod hoof striking the ground.
- (slang) My Little Pony-themed pornography.
Derived terms
Translations
The sound of a horse's shod hoof striking the ground
Verb
clop (third-person singular simple present clops, present participle clopping, simple past and past participle clopped)
- To make this sound; to walk so as to make this sound.
1959, Anthony Burgess, Beds in the East (The Malayan Trilogy), published 1972, page 569:Robert Loo sat and listened behind his counter, his heart aching, his eyes staring at nothing, while his brothers cheerfully clopped around, occasionally calling to the kitchen, as customers drifted somnambulistically in.
- (slang) To masturbate to My Little Pony-themed pornography.
Derived terms
Anagrams
Old French
Etymology
From Late Latin cloppus, perhaps ultimately imitative of a limping person.[1]
Adjective
clop m (oblique and nominative feminine singular clope)
- hobbling; limping
Declension
References
- ^ The Pharos of Alpha Omega Alpha-Honor Medical Society. (1982). United States: Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Medical Society, p. 24
Romanian
Etymology
Borrowed from Hungarian kalap.
Noun
clop n (plural clopuri)
- (Transylvania, Banat) hat
Declension