glop

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English

Pronunciation

Etymology 1

Variation of glope.

Verb

glop (third-person singular simple present glops, present participle glopping, simple past and past participle glopped)

  1. (dialectal or archaic) To stare in amazement.

Etymology 2

1940-45, of expressive origin. Compare goop, gulp.

Noun

glop (countable and uncountable, plural glops)

  1. (informal, uncountable) Any gooey substance.
    • 2012, Kathryn Lasky, Chasing Orion, page 308:
      He inserted the needle, and in about thirty seconds the most disgusting greenish glop started to drop into the bowl.
  2. (informal, countable) A gooey blob of some substance.
    • 1967-1969, Lou Sullivan, personal diary, quoted in 2019, Ellis Martin, Zach Ozma (editors), We Both Laughed In Pleasure
      Got out a jack knife & scraped glops of wax off the floor.
    • 2015, Kristen L. Middleton, W. J. May, Suzy Turner, Darlings of Darkness:
      Kylarai studied me as I picked a glop of mascara from one lash.
Derived terms
Translations

Verb

glop (third-person singular simple present glops, present participle glopping, simple past and past participle glopped)

  1. (transitive, informal) To apply (a liquid) thickly and messily.
    • 2012, Courtney Milan, The Duchess War:
      He unscrewed the top from the pot, dipped the stick in, and clumsily glopped the white mess onto the handbill Minnie was holding. “You are an untidy paster.”
  2. (transitive, archaic or slang) To swallow greedily.
    • 2014, Michelle Mankin, Captivating Bridge
      drinking something. Probably that nasty spinach concoction she glopped down every morning.

Catalan

Etymology

Onomatopoeic.

Pronunciation

Noun

glop m (plural glops)

  1. gulp, sip
    un glop de cafèa sip of coffee

Derived terms

Further reading

Dutch

Etymology

Related to West Frisian gloppe (alley), Old Norse gloppa (mountain gorge), Norwegian Bokmål glop (opening, hole), Icelandic glopa, Faroese gloppa (ajar); per Kroonen, all from Proto-Germanic *gluppa (open space), a derivative of *gluppōn (yawning, being open), from Pre-Germanic *glub-n-, *glub-, to which gleuf (slit, opening) might also belong.

Pronunciation

Noun

glop n (plural gloppen, diminutive glopje n)

  1. (Northern, dialectal) opening, hole, crevice
  2. (Holland, dialectal) alley, narrow passage, narrow street
  3. (Northern, dialectal) open space, clearing

References

  • Kroonen, Guus (2013) “gluppa”, in Etymological Dictionary of Proto-Germanic (Leiden Indo-European Etymological Dictionary Series; 11), Leiden, Boston: Brill, →ISBN, pages 181-82

Further reading