Online Google Dictionary

bop 中文解釋 wordnet sense Collocation Usage Collins Definition
Verb
/bäp/,
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bops, 3rd person singular present; bopping, present participle; bopped, past tense; bopped, past participle;
  1. Hit; punch lightly
    • - I warned him I'd bop him on the nose if he tried it
Noun
  1. A blow or light punch


  1. Federal Bureau of Prisons: the law enforcement agency of the Justice Department that operates a nationwide system of prisons and detention facilities to incarcerate inmates sentenced to imprisonment for federal crimes
  2. dance the bebop
  3. an early form of modern jazz (originating around 1940)
  4. sock: hit hard
  5. "Bop" is the second single released from Dan Seals' 1985 album Won't Be Blue Anymore. It reached #1 on the Country singles chart in early-1986 - his second number one hit, but his first as a solo artist. ...
  6. Bop magazine is a monthly American entertainment magazine for kids 10 years of age and teens. It began publication in the summer of 1983 and is published by Laufer Media, which also publishes Tiger Beat magazine. ...
  7. A party is a gathering of people who have been invited by a host for the purposes of socializing, conversation, or recreation. A party will typically feature food and beverages, and often music and dancing as well.
  8. A very light smack, blow or punch; To gently or playfully strike someone or something
  9. Small-scale club night in a College, usually advertised and open to all Cambridge students. The nearest equivalent in Corpus is a slack.
  10. n. A college event, i.e. a disco. Occur rarely in the party room (underneath the bar)
  11. A style of jazz characterized by rhythmic and harmonic complexity, improvised solo performances and a virtuoso execution.
  12. Broken Orange Pekoe; full-bodied black tea comprising broken segments of coarse leaves without tips; BOP is the smallest of the leaf grades
  13. is a central concept in neorealist theory. Within a balance of power system, a state may choose to engage in either balancing or bandwagoning behavior. In a time of war, the decision to balance or to bandwagon may well determine the survival of the state. ...
  14. basically a big disco in college two or three times a term.
  15. Brain on paper. The way we keep track of routines so we can free our minds for worthwhile pursuits. Nest 8. Nest 9.Nest 42.
  16. Bottom of the Pyramid (or Base of the Pyramid)
  17. Equivalent of school discos at a Cambridge College, normally cheesy, but expanding to alternative scenes. Generally organised by ents (short for "entertainments", see below) committees. ...
  18. Disco put on in the Fitzpatrick Hall by Queens’ Ents. Probably the closest thing to Animal House this side of Churchill. Also, a sharp punch to the head. Sometimes both.
  19. meaning “to go” was a popular phrase in the late 1960s and 70s: “Let bop on down to the concert.” It comes from Be-Bop, a fast tempo, improvisational jazz introduced by black musicians in the 1940s, setting it apart from mainstream jazz, called swing. ...
  20. Bind on Pickup, Items that become soulbound when the player loots them. These items cannot be traded/sold to other players.
  21. Battery, Oil and Paint Recycling Center
  22. generic term for that form of modern jazz, originally known as bebop or rebop, which developed in the forties.
  23. Bind On Pickup - a piece of loot that once picked up is bound to the player that picked it up. This is primarily a mechanism for limiting the redistribution/sale of valuable items - ie: you must be present to win if the item is BOP. (Someone else can’t get it for you.)
  24. Formerly known as "Megabop" - a form of entertainment, held only on Friday nights, at which people dance. Badly.
  25. The Bop is a poetic form that was developed by poet Afaa Michael Weaver at a Cave Canem summer retreat. ...