Advertisement
Advertisement
mop
1[ mop ]
noun
- a bundle of coarse yarn, a sponge, or other absorbent material, fastened at the end of a stick or handle for washing floors, dishes, etc.
- a thick mass of hair.
- a polishing wheel having several layers of cloth secured by a boss.
verb (used with object)
- to rub, wipe, clean, or remove with a mop (often followed by up ):
to mop up a spill.
- to wipe as if with a mop:
to mop the face with a handkerchief.
verb (used without object)
- to clean or wipe with or as if with a mop (often followed by up ):
First he swept, then he mopped up.
verb phrase
- Military. to clear (ground, trenches, towns, etc.) of scattered or remaining enemy combatants after attacking forces have conquered the area.
- Informal. to dispose of; complete; finish:
He mopped up the rest of his business and went on a vacation.
mop
1/ mɒp /
noun
- (in various parts of England) an annual fair at which formerly servants were hired
mop
2/ mɒp /
noun
- an implement with a wooden handle and a head made of twists of cotton or a piece of synthetic sponge, used for polishing or washing floors, or washing dishes
- something resembling this, such as a tangle of hair
verb
- troften foll byup to clean or soak up with or as if with a mop
mop
3/ mɒp /
verb
- intr to make a grimace or sad expression (esp in the phrase mop and mow )
noun
- such a face or expression
Word History and Origins
Origin of mop1
Origin of mop2
Word History and Origins
Origin of mop1
Origin of mop2
Origin of mop3
Idioms and Phrases
- mop the floor with. floor ( def 20 ).
Example Sentences
Professor Myles Allen, of the University of Oxford's Department of Physics, who led the study, summarises: "We are already counting on forests and oceans to mop up our past emissions, most of which came from burning stuff we dug out of the ground. We can't expect them to compensate for future emissions as well. By mid-century, any carbon that still comes out of the ground will have to go back down, to permanent storage. That's Geological Net Zero."
At one point you discovered some moisture onstage and asked a crew member to bring out a mop.
Then you took the mop and improvised a song about it.
Those mop moments are few and far between.
We saw plastic toilet brushes and toothbrushes with razor blades melted into their ends, and heavy metal poles and mop handles.
Advertisement
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse