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- From the verb cop: (⇒ conjugate)
- cops is: ⓘClick the infinitive to see all available inflections
- v 3rd person singular
WordReference Random House Learner's Dictionary of American English © 2025cop1 /kɑp/USA pronunciation
v., copped, cop•ping. Informal.
- to seize or steal:She copped first prize in the contest.
- cop out, [no object]to avoid a responsibility:He was going to help us but at the last minute he copped out.[~ + out + on + object]Don't cop out on us again.
Idioms
- Idioms cop a plea, to plea-bargain.
cop2 /kɑp/USA pronunciation
n. [countable][Informal.]
- Informal Terms a police officer.
cop.,
an abbreviation of:- copyright;
copyrighted.
WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2025cop1
(kop),USA pronunciation v.t., copped, cop•ping. [Informal.]
- Informal Termsto catch;
nab.
- Informal Termsto steal;
filch.
- Informal Termsto buy (narcotics).
- Idioms cop a plea:
- to plead guilty or confess in return for receiving a lighter sentence.
- to plead guilty to a lesser charge as a means of bargaining one's way out of standing trial for a more serious charge;
plea-bargain.
- cop out:
- to avoid one's responsibility, the fulfillment of a promise, etc.;
renege; back out (often fol. by on or of ):He never copped out on a friend in need. You agreed to go, and you can't cop out now.
- cop a plea.
- Latin capere
- compare cap (obsolete) to arrest, Scots cap to seize dialect, dialectal Old French caper to take, ultimately 1695–1705
cop2
(kop),USA pronunciation n. [Informal.]
- Informal Termsa police officer.
- a person who seeks to regulate a specified behavior, activity, practice, etc.:character cops.
- clipping of copper2 1855–60
cop3
(kop),USA pronunciation n.
- a conical mass of thread, yarn, etc., wound on a spindle.
- British Termscrest;
tip.
- bef. 1000; Middle English, Old English cop tip, top (in Middle English also head), probably cognate with Dutch kop, German Kopf head; see cup
COP, [Thermodynam.]
- ThermodynamicsSee coefficient of performance.
Cop.,
- Copernican.
- ReligionCoptic.
cop.,
- Chemistrycopper.
- copyright;
copyrighted.
Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers::
cop / kɒp/ - a police officer
- an arrest (esp in the phrase a fair cop)
(cops, copping, copped)(transitive)- to seize or catch
- to steal
- to buy, steal, or otherwise obtain (illegal drugs)
Compare score26 - Also: cop it to suffer (a punishment): you'll cop a clout if you do that!
- cop it sweet ⇒ to accept a penalty without complaint
- to have good fortune
Etymology: 18th Century: (vb) perhaps from obsolete cap to arrest, from Old French caper to seize; sense 1, back formation from copper2 cop / kɒp/ - a conical roll of thread wound on a spindle
- the top or crest, as of a hill
Etymology: Old English cop, copp top, summit, of uncertain origin; perhaps related to Old English copp cup cop / kɒp/ - (usually used with a negative) worth or value: that work is not much cop
Etymology: 19th Century: n use of cop1 (in the sense: to catch, hence something caught, something of value)
'cops' also found in these entries (note: many are not synonyms or translations):
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