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  1. Dictionary
    Lop
    /läp/

    verb

    noun

    • 1. branches and twigs lopped off trees: "in many forests they took the lop and top, and in some cases the stump, of trees"
  2. People also ask

  3. LOP: Lack of Performance (human resources) LOP: Lunar Orbital Prospector: LOP: Labour Overhead and Profit: LOP: Local Operational Plot (US Navy) LOP: Lines of Persuasion (psychologial operations tactics) LOP: Limit of Protection: LOP: Local Operational Plan: LOP: Lack of Potential: LOP: Letter Of Proposal: LOP: Linear Optimization Problem: LOP ...

  4. lop meaning, definition, what is lop: to cut something, especially branches fr...: Learn more.

  5. lop something to cut down a tree, or cut some large branches off it. Definition of lop verb in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

    • English
    • A-Pucikwar
    • Franco-Provençal
    • Hungarian
    • Indonesian
    • Middle English
    • Occitan
    • Veps
    • Volapük

    Pronunciation

    1. IPA(key): /lɒp/ 2. Rhymes: -ɒp

    Etymology 1

    From Middle English loppe (“bough”); the verb is a back-formation from the noun.

    Etymology 2

    From Middle English loppe (“flea, spider”), from Old English loppe (“spider, silk-worm, flea”), from Proto-Germanic *luppǭ (“flea, sandflea", originally, "jumper”), from Proto-Germanic *luppijaną (“to jump, dart”). Cognate with Danish loppe (“flea”), Swedish loppa (“flea”). Compare also Middle High German lüpfen, lupfen(“to raise”, obsolete also “to rise”).

    Etymology

    From Proto-Great Andamanese *lap.

    Verb

    lop 1. to count

    References

    1. Juliette Blevins, Linguistic clues to Andamanese pre-history: Understanding the North-South divide, pg. 21 (2009)

    Alternative forms

    1. lo (Dauphinois, archaic)

    Etymology

    Inherited from Latin lupus.

    Noun

    lop m (plural lops) (ORB) 1. wolf

    Etymology

    Of unknown origin. First attested around 1519. Another possible citing as a proper noun in 1086 is also mentioned.

    Pronunciation

    1. IPA(key): [ˈlop] 2. Rhymes: -op

    Verb

    lop 1. (transitive) to steal, to shoplift (from someone -tól/-től) 1.1. Másoktól lop ötleteket. ― He/she steals ideas fromothers. 1.2. Synonyms: (slang) csór, lenyúl, meglovasít, megfúj, (literary) oroz, (formal) eltulajdonít, (euphemistic, informal) elemel 1.3. Perfective: ellop

    Etymology

    From Dutch loop, from Middle Dutch lôop, from Old Dutch *lōp.

    Pronunciation

    1. IPA(key): [ˈlɔp̚] 2. Hyphenation: lop

    Noun

    lop (plural lop-lop, first-person possessive lopku, second-person possessive lopmu, third-person possessive lopnya) 1. barrel (of a firearm) 1.1. Synonym: laras

    Noun

    lop 1. Alternative form of loppe (“spider”)

    Etymology

    From Old Occitan lop, from Latin lupus.

    Pronunciation

    1. IPA(key): [ˈlup]

    Noun

    lop m (plural lops, feminine loba, feminine plural lobas) 1. wolf

    Etymology

    From Proto-Finnic *loppu.

    Noun

    lop 1. end 2. (often in the plural) the rest 3. (grammar) ending

    Noun

    lop (nominative plural lops) 1. opera

  6. Dec 20, 2021 · LOP simply means Letter of Protection. How to Define LOP. The most basic LOP definition is that a Letter of Protection is a legally binding document between an injury victim, their personal injury attorney, and their medical provider that guarantees payment for medical expenses. Letter of Protection for Medical Treatment.

  7. 3 days ago · verb Word forms: lops, lopping, lopped (transitive; usually foll by off) 1. to sever (parts) from a tree, body, etc, esp with swift strokes. 2. to cut out or eliminate from as excessive. noun. 3. a part or parts lopped off, as from a tree. Collins English Dictionary.

  8. Britannica Dictionary definition of LOP. [+ object] 1. : to cut branches from (a tree, bush, etc.) trees that have been heavily lopped. 2. : to cut or cut off (something) badly lopped hair. — usually + off. lop off a dead branch. He accidentally lopped off [= chopped off] one of his fingers. — often used figuratively.