flop
Appearance
English
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /flɒp/
- (General American) IPA(key): /flɑp/
- (General Australian) IPA(key): /flɔp/
Audio (General Australian): (file)
- Rhymes: -ɒp
Etymology 1
[edit]Recorded since 1602, probably a variant of flap with a duller, heavier sound
Verb
[edit]flop (third-person singular simple present flops, present participle flopping, simple past and past participle flopped)
- (intransitive) To fall heavily due to lack of energy.
- He flopped down in front of the television, exhausted from work.
- 1846, Charles Dickens, “Lyons, the Rhone, and the Goblin of Avignon”, in Pictures from Italy, London: […] Bradbury & Evans, […], →OCLC, page 19:
- There was [in the clock in Lyons Cathedral] a centre puppet of the Virgin Mary; and close to her, a small pigeon-hole, out of which another and a very ill-looking puppet made one of the most sudden plunges I ever saw accomplished: instantly flopping back again at sight of her, and banging his little door violently, after him.
- (transitive) To cause to drop heavily.
- The tired mule flopped its ears forward and trudged on.
- (intransitive, informal) To fail completely; not to be successful at all (of a movie, play, book, song etc.).
- The latest album flopped and so the studio canceled her contract.
- (sports, intransitive) To pretend to be fouled in sports, such as basketball, hockey (the same as to dive in soccer)
- It starts with Chris Paul, because Blake didn't really used to flop like that, you know, last year.
- While Stern chastised Vogel for on Thursday calling the Heat "the biggest flopping team in the NBA," he did intimate that he sees merit in the sentiment.
- (intransitive) To strike about with something broad and flat, as a fish with its tail, or a bird with its wings; to rise and fall; to flap.
- The brim of a hat flops.
- (poker, transitive) To have (a hand) using the community cards dealt on the flop.
- Both players flopped sets! Cards dealt on the flop: Q95. Player A's hole cards: 55 (making three of a kind: 555). Player B's hole cards: QQ (making three of a kind: QQQ).
- (intransitive, slang) To stay, sleep or live in a place.
- 1969, Howard E. Freeman, Norman R. Kurtz, America's Troubles: A Casebook on Social Conflict, Prentice-Hall, page 414:
- […] not just the old material goal of "three hots and a place to flop," […]
- 1973, Alan Watts, Cloud-Hidden, Whereabouts Unknown: A Mountain Journal, Pantheon Books, page 135:
- They have opened up crypts and basements as immense pads where vagrant and impoverished hippies can flop for the night.
- (transitive) To flip; to reverse (an image).
- 1968, Advertising Techniques, volumes 4-5, page 28:
- The possibilities of this type of shot are almost limitless. By quartering the screen and duplicating and flopping the picture, a kaleidoscopic effect is achieved.
- 1986, Functional Photography, volumes 21-23, page 58:
- […] in order to flop the image left-to-right, or all printing will appear reversed.
- (transitive, prison slang) To deny someone parole.
- 1986 April 12, anonymous author, “One Day I'll Write a Book on This”, in Gay Community News, page 4:
- I've been incarcerated going on 9½ years. I have never been back on the streets or given a chance to prove myself to society. Every time I would meet the parole board they would flop me telling me I would be a threat to society.
Derived terms
[edit]terms derived from flop (verb)
Translations
[edit]to fall heavily, due to lacking energy
|
to fail completely, not to be successful at all
|
- The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.
Translations to be checked
Noun
[edit]flop (plural flops)
- A heavy, passive fall; a plopping down.
- A complete failure, especially in the entertainment industry.
- Synonyms: dud, fiasco, turkey, box office bomb
- 1979, Lou Reed (lyrics and music), “I Want to Boogie With You”, in The Bells:
- Well I know your little baby sister / She thinks that I'm a flop / But I guess that you know that it's true / I spent more time at the bottom than the top
- (poker) The first three cards turned face-up by the dealer in a community card poker game.
- 1996, John Patrick, John Patrick's Casino Poker: Professional Gambler's Guide to Winning:
- The flop didn't help you but probably did help the other hands.
- 2003, Lou Krieger, Internet Poker: How to Play and Beat Online Poker Games:
- Here are six tips to help you play successfully on the flop (the first three communal cards).
- 2005, Henry Stephenson, Real Poker Night: Taking Your Home Game to a New Level:
- The strength of your hand now has nothing to do with how strong it may have been before the flop.
- A ponded package of dung, as in a cow-flop.
- 1960, Winston Graham, Ross Poldark: A Novel of Cornwall, 1783-1787, Bodley Head, page 302:
- "Maybe as you think," he said, "because as I've the misfortune of an accidental slip on a cow-flop therefore I has the inability of an unborn babe, ...
- 2000, Dean King, A Sea of Words: A Lexicon and Companion for Patrick O'Brian's Seafaring Tales, Henry Holt & Co., page 162:
- ... cowpat or cow-flop, Cow dung, often used dry as heating fuel.
- 2003, John W. Billheimer, Drybone Hollow, St. Martin's Press, page 215:
- "Cow flop in a neat package is still cow flop. What did Cable stand to gain from the flood?"
- 2018 Brent Butt as Brent Herbert Leroy, "Sasquatch Your Language", Corner Gas Animated
- Wherever legitimate tracks are found there's always some fresh scat, y'know, poo, flop, dumplings.
- (slang) A flophouse.
- 2013, Gardner Dozois, Jack Dann, Dangerous Games:
- He was kind of worn but the tooth said he'd never lost a fight or slept in a flop.
Derived terms
[edit]Translations
[edit]failure, especially in the entertainment industry
|
poned package of dung
- The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.
Translations to be checked
Interjection
[edit]flop
- Indicating the sound of something flopping.
- 1900, Joseph Conrad, Lord Jim, page xx. 154:
- "One step. Steady. Another step. Flop! I got him!"
Adverb
[edit]flop (not comparable)
- Right, squarely, flat-out.
- She fell flop on the floor.
- With a flopping sound.
See also
[edit]Related terms
[edit]Etymology 2
[edit]A variant capitalization of FLOP, a syllabic acronym of floating-point operations.
Noun
[edit]flop (plural flops)
- (computing) One floating-point operation per second, a unit of measure of processor speed.
- 1992 March 2, Richard Preston, “The Mountains of Pi”, in The New Yorker:
- The gigaflop supercomputers of today are almost useless. What is needed is a teraflop machine. That’s a machine that can run at a trillion flops, a trillion floating-point operations per second, or roughly a thousand times as fast as Cray Y-MP8.
- (computing) Abbreviation of floating-point operation.
- 1993 August 17, New York Times, C8:
- The Correlator can perform 750 billion ‘flops’, or simple calculations, per second.
Alternative forms
[edit]Derived terms
[edit]References
[edit]- “FLOP, n2.”, in OED Online , Oxford: Oxford University Press, December 2012.
Dutch
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Borrowed from English flop. See also flap.
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]flop m (plural floppen or flops, diminutive flopje n)
- a failure, something that went wrong
- short for floppydisk
Synonyms
[edit]- fiasco (1)
- mislukking (1)
- sof (1)
- diskette (2)
Descendants
[edit]- → Indonesian: flop (“failure”)
Verb
[edit]flop
- inflection of floppen:
Anagrams
[edit]French
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Audio: (file)
Noun
[edit]flop m (plural flops)
- (colloquial) flop (failure)
Indonesian
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Dutch flop, from English flop, perhaps a variant of flap. The sport sense is semantic loan from English.
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]flop
- a failure, something that went wrong
- flop (to strike about with something broad and flat, to rise and fall, to flap)
- high jump
References
[edit]- “flop” in Kamus Besar Bahasa Indonesia, Jakarta: Agency for Language Development and Cultivation – Ministry of Education, Culture, Research, and Technology of the Republic of Indonesia, 2016.
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