Pop Definition–verb (used without object) | 1. | to make a short, quick, explosive sound: The cork popped. | | 2. | to burst open with such a sound, as chestnuts or corn in roasting. | | 3. | to come or go quickly, suddenly, or unexpectedly: She popped into the kitchen to check the stove. | | 4. | to shoot with a firearm: to pop at a mark. | | 5. | to protrude from the sockets: The news made her eyes pop. | | 6. | Baseball. | a. | to hit a pop fly (often fol. by up). | | –verb (used with object) | 7. | to cause to make a sudden, explosive sound. | | 8. | to cause to burst open with such a sound. | | 9. | to open suddenly or violently: to pop the hood on a car; to pop the tab on a beer can. | | 10. | to put or thrust quickly, suddenly, or unexpectedly: He popped the muffins into the oven. | | 11. | Informal. to cause to fire; discharge: He popped his rifle at the bird. | | 12. | to shoot (usually fol. by at, off, etc.): He popped off bottles with a slingshot. | | 13. | British Slang. to pawn. | | 14. | Informal. | a. | to take or s
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wallow (pills), esp. in excess or habitually; take orally in a compulsive or addictive way: Popping all those pills will land him in the hospital. | | b. | to eat in a continual or thoughtless manner, as snack foods: popping peanuts at the movies. | | –noun | 15. | a short, quick, explosive sound. | | 17. | a shot with a firearm. | | 19. | a drink or portion of an alcoholic beverage, as a drink of whiskey or a glass of beer: We had a couple of pops on the way home. | –adverb | 21. | with an explosive sound: The balloon went pop. | | 22. | quickly, suddenly, or unexpectedly: Pop, the door flew open! | –adjective | 23. | Informal. unexpected; without prior warning or announcement: The teacher gave us a pop quiz. | —Verb phrases | 24. | pop for, Slang. to pay or buy for oneself or another, esp. as a gift or treat; spring for: I'll pop for the first round of drinks. | | 25. | pop off, Informal. | a. | to die, esp. suddenly. | | b. | to depart, esp. abruptly. | | c. | to express oneself volubly or excitedly and sometimes irately or indiscreetly: He popped off about the injustice of the verdict. | | | 26. | pop out, Baseball. to be put out by hitting a pop fly caught on the fly by a player on the opposing team. | | 27. | pop up, Baseball. to hit a pop fly. | —Idioms | 28. | a pop, Slang. each; apiece: five orchids at $30 a pop. | | 29. | pop in, Informal. to visit briefly and unexpectedly; stop in; drop by: Maybe we'll pop in after the movie. | | 30. | pop the question, Informal. to propose marriage: They dated for two years before he popped the question. | | From Dictionary
Stop Definition–verb (used with object) | 1. | to cease from, leave off, or discontinue: to stop running. | | 2. | to cause to cease; put an end to: to stop noise in the street. | | 3. | to interrupt, arrest, or check (a course, proceeding, process, etc.): Stop your work just a minute. | | 4. | to cut off, intercept, or withhold: to stop supplies. | | 5. | to restrain, hinder, or prevent (usually fol. by from): I couldn't stop him from going. | | 6. | to prevent from proceeding, acting, operating, continuing, etc.: to stop a speaker; to stop a car. | | 7. | to block, obstruct, or close (a passageway, channel, opening, duct, etc.) (usually fol. by up): He stopped up the sink with a paper towel. He stopped the hole in the tire with a patch. | | 8. | to fill the hole or holes in (a wall, a decayed tooth, etc.). | | 9. | to close (a container, tube, etc.) with a cork, plug, bung, or the like. | | 10. | to close the external orifice of (the ears, nose, mouth, etc.). | | 11. | Sports. | a. | to check (a stroke, blow, etc.); parry; ward off. | | b. | to defeat (an opposing player or team): The Browns stopped the Colts. | | c. | Boxing. to defeat by a knockout or technical knockout: Louis stopped Conn in the 13th round. | | | 12. | Banking. to notify a bank to refuse payment of (a check) upon presentation. | | 13. | Bridge. to have an honor card and a sufficient number of protecting cards to keep an opponent from continuing to win in (a suit). | | 14. | Music. | a. | to close (a fingerhole) in order to produce a particular note from a wind instrument. | | b. | to press down (a string of a violin, viola, etc.) in order to alter the pitch of the tone produced from it. | c. | to produce (a particular note) by so doing. | | –verb (used without object) | 15. | to come to a stand, as in a course or journey; halt. | | 16. | to cease moving, proceeding, speaking, acting, operating, etc.; to pause; desist. | | 17. | to cease; come to an end. | | 18. | to halt for a brief visit (often fol. by at, in, or by): He is stopping at the best hotel in town. | | 19. | stop by, to make a brief visit on one's way elsewhere: I'll stop by on my way home. | –noun | 21. | a cessation or arrest of movement, action, operation, etc.; end: The noise came to a stop. Put a stop to that behavior! | | 22. | a stay or sojourn made at a place, as in the course of a journey: Above all, he enjoyed his stop in Trieste. | | 23. | a place where trains or other vehicles halt to take on and discharge passengers: Is this a bus stop? | | 24. | a closing or filling up, as of a hole. | | 25. | a blocking or obstructing, as of a passage or channel. | | 26. | a plug or other stopper for an opening. | | 27. | an obstacle, impediment, or hindrance. | | 28. | any piece or device that serves to check or control movement or action in a mechanism. | | 29. | Architecture. a feature terminating a molding or chamfer. | | 30. | Commerce. | a. | an order to refuse payment of a check. | | | 31. | Music. | a. | the act of closing a fingerhole or pressing a string of an instrument in order to produce a particular note. | | b. | a device or contrivance, as on an instrument, for accomplishing this. | | c. | (in an organ)
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a graduated set of pipes of the same kind and giving tones of the same quality. | | d. | Also called stop knob. a knob or handle that is drawn out or pushed back to permit or prevent the sounding of such a set of pipes or to control some other part of the organ. | | e. | (in a reed organ) a group of reeds functioning like a pipe-organ stop. | | | 32. | Sports. an individual defensive play or act that prevents an opponent or opposing team from scoring, advancing, or gaining an advantage, as a catch in baseball, a tackle in football, or the deflection of a shot in hockey. | | 33. | Nautical. a piece of small line used to lash or fasten something, as a furled sail. | | 34. | Phonetics. | a. | an articulation that interrupts the flow of air from the lungs. | | b. | a consonant sound characterized by stop articulation, as p, b, t, d, k, and g. Compare continuant. | | | 35. | Photography. the diaphragm opening of a lens, esp. as indicated by an f- number. | | 37. | any of various marks used as punctuation at the end of a sentence, esp. a period. | | 38. | the word “stop” printed in the body of a telegram or cablegram to indicate a period. | | 39. | stops, (used with a singular verb ) a family of card games whose object is to play all of one's cards in a predetermined sequence before one's opponents. | | 40. | Zoology. a depression in the face of certain animals, esp. dogs, marking the division between the forehead and the projecting part of the muzzle. | —Verb phrases | 41. | stop down, Photography. (on a camera) to reduce (the diaphragm opening of a lens). | | 42. | stop in, to make a brief, incidental visit: If you're in town, be sure to stop in. | | 43. | stop off, to halt for a brief stay at some point on the way elsewhere: On the way to Rome we stopped off at Florence. | | 44. | stop out, | a. | to mask (certain areas of an etching plate, photographic negative, etc.) with varnish, paper, or the like, to prevent their being etched, printed, etc. | | b. | to withdraw temporarily from school: Most of the students who stop out eventually return to get their degrees. | | | 45. | stop over, to stop briefly in the course of a journey: Many motorists were forced to stop over in that town because of floods. | —Idiom | 46. | pull out all the stops, | a. | to use every means available. | | b. | to express, do, or carry out something without reservation. | | From DictionaryRelated topics from Britannicapop ballad form of slow love song prevalent in nearly all genres of popular music. There are rock ballads, soul ballads, country ballads, and even heavy metal ballads.Diamond Harbour city, southeastern West Bengal state, northeastern India, on both sides of Hajipur Creek, a tributary of the Hooghly River. It is an agricultural trade centre; rice milling is the chief industry. An ...
Frederick city, seat (1907) of Tillman county, southwestern Oklahoma, U.S. With the opening of the Kiowa-Apache-Comanche reservation to settlement in 1901, the community grew up around a stop on the Blackwell, ...
Zermatt town, Valais canton, southern Switzerland. It lies at the head of the Mattervisp Valley and at the foot of the Matterhorn (14,692 feet [4,478 m]), 23 miles (37 km) southeast of Sion. Its name is ...
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Jackson, Michael American singer, songwriter, and dancer who was the most popular entertainer in the world in the early and mid-1980s. Reared in Gary, Indiana, in one of the most acclaimed musical families of the ...
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PARAGUAY Paraguay is a landlocked republic of central South America. Area: 406,752 sq km (157,048 sq mi). Pop. (1994 est.): 4,732,000. Cap.: Asuncion. Monetary unit: guarani, with (Oct. 7, 1994) a free rate ...
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Performing Arts The year 2002 was a classic one for African music, and arguably the finest of a batch of great new albums came from the celebrated Malian singer Salif Keita. His recent work had included excursions ...
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Related topics from Ask NewsTyler Goldman: Giving pop culture more fizz
Los Angeles Times - Found 12 hours ago ... he describes as a one-stop shop for pop culture. ... was an insatiable demand for pop culture and that pop culture is built from the ground ...
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Girl Talk's sampling is hook city for pop fans
Louisville Courier-Journal - Found 23 hours ago ... who's grown up listening to the radio during the past 15 or 20 years. The similarities stop ... majority of lyrics, while rock and pop are the
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What will stop you from pirating?
BBC - Found Nov. 12, 2008 ... the other day, 'when I was young I'd pop the odd ... along and say we know what you are up to, can you please stop - that they would stop,' he ...
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myShape(R) Debuts the Little Black 'Dress-Up' Shop Just in Time for ...
Little Black 'Dress-Up' just in time for holiday season
Fibre 2 Fashion - Found Nov. 12, 2008 ... debuts its one-stop Little Black 'Dress-Up' Shop ... Holiday Dress-Up! Eye-catching embellishments, pop colors, and chic seasonal layers all ...
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'Pop a cop' comes up again in NH trial
Boston Globe - Found Oct. 30, 2008 'Addison said to me that if the cops pull up he'll pop shots, he'll pop a cop,' Jeffrey Hayes ... he expressed concern that police might stop and
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Strange objects appear on Sault stop signs
Soo Today - Found Nov. 11, 2008 They cost $600 a pop and a single maintenance call runs ... said the City is looking into solar-powered LEDs for more than back-up stop signs, too.
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Teen Vogue Opening Pop-up Shop
New York Magazine - Found Oct. 31, 2008 ... is beefing up ad pages by opening a pop-up shop at a mall in Short Hills, New Jersey. But merchandise won't be for sale. Instead girls can stop...
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Stega Nona's creator makes beloved character pop-up
Morning Call - Found Nov. 2, 2008 ... at the Moravian Book Shop in Bethlehem during a stop on his national tour. Strega Nona isn't dePaola's first experience with pop-up books.
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Dens Shipley & Halmos Pop-up Shop Opens
New York Magazine - Found Oct. 15, 2008 Shipley & Halmos pop-up shop opens at Den in the East Village today. The label doesn't have a stand-alone store so consider this your one-stop...
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