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English
Etymology 1
From lope (“to leap, to run”) + -er.
Noun
loper (plural lopers)
- One who or that which lopes; a runner; a leaper.
2000, Marilyn Elkins, August Wilson: A Casebook:Wolves are very intelligent animals, and they are lopers and they are survivors.
- (ropemaking) A swivel placed at one end of the ropewalk, with the whirl being at the opposite end.
Etymology 2
From American Spanish lobo (“wolf”) (/ˈloβo/), reinterpreted as or conflated with loper (“one who lopes”); compare the alternative forms which reflect other re-interpretations and conflations.
Noun
loper (plural lopers)
- (Southwestern US dialects) A wolf, especially a grey or timber wolf.
1905 April 22, C. Blanco, “Flanking a Wolf”, in Forest and Stream, page 314:When I was still some distance above the ford, about a dozen prairie wolves and one loper* wolf ran up from the water. They told me that there were no Indians near here or they would not be here; and they were not here long, either. [...] the big loper left on a slow gallop [...]
Loper, corruption of Sp. lobo, wolf.
1936, James Shannon Buchanan, Chronicles of Oklahoma:Besides the cattle company paid a bounty for each coyote, loper wolf, panther, bobcat or bear. We had to buy our own six-shooter but the company furnished ammunition free. So it can be seen why most cowboys were pretty good shots.
Usage notes
- Often used in compound with "wolf": "loper wolf".
Further reading
- Belford's Magazine, 1890, page 713: “It is the great gray wolf; called the "loper" wolf in Texas, not because of his gait, but because his Spanish name is "lobo," and has been slightly changed by certain frontier Americans […]”
- 1905, Jerome Constant Smiley, National Live Stock Association of the United States, Prose and Poetry of the Live Stock Industry of the United States: With Outlines of the Origin and Ancient History of Our Live Stock Animals, page 719:
- was the greatest pest of the country the great gray wolf, otherwise known as the "timber wolf," the "buffalo wolf," the "loper wolf," the "loafer wolf," and the "lobo wolf."
Anagrams
Afrikaans
Etymology
From Dutch loper (“walker, runner, messenger, bishop (chess piece), carpet, master key, offshoot”), from Middle Dutch lopere (“runner, messenger, walker”). Equivalent to loop + -er.
Pronunciation
Noun
loper (plural lopers, diminutive lopertjie)
- (chess) bishop; chess piece that moves diagonally
- walker; someone who walks
- (archaic) runner; someone who runs or moves quickly
- (historical) messenger, that delivers messages by foot
- (botany) shoot or sprout that forms at the end of roots from which new shoots or sprouts develop
- (botany, uncommon) tendrils of creepers and vines used for support
Synonyms
See also
Dutch
Etymology
From Middle Dutch lopere. Equivalent to lopen + -er.
In the chess sense, likely a semantic loan from German Läufer.
Pronunciation
Noun
loper m (plural lopers, diminutive lopertje n)
- runner
- Synonyms: hardloper, renner
- somebody who walks
- a carpet
- rode loper — red carpet
- (chess) bishop
- Synonym: raadsheer
- master key
- Synonym: moedersleutel
- message runner, messager who runs on foot
- (archaic) shoot from the roots of a plant
- Synonym: uitloper
Derived terms
Descendants
See also
Indonesian
Etymology
From Dutch loper, from Middle Dutch lopere.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /lo.pər/
- Hyphenation: lo‧pêr
Noun
lopêr
- (colloquial) deliveryman, that delivers newspaper, and so on.
- (chess) bishop: the chess piece denoted ♗ or ♝ which moves along diagonal lines and developed from the shatranj alfil ("elephant") and was originally known as the aufil or archer in English.
- Synonyms: menteri, gajah, luncup
See also
Chess pieces in Indonesian · buah catur (see also: catur) (layout · text)
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raja
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menteri, patih, ratu, ster
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benteng
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gajah, loper, menteri, luncung, luncur, peluncur
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kuda
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bidak, pion, prajurit
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Further reading