Cop
51còp — medm. (ȍ) posnema zamolkel, odsekan glas pri hoji: hodil je s težkimi nogami: cop, cop; cop cop cop, teka otrok po sobi …
52čòp — čôpa tudi čópa m (ȍ ó, ọ) 1. šop las, dlake, perja: povezati lase v čop; v čope razdeljena dlaka; kokoši s čopi / perjaničast čop na šlemu 2. urejen, povezan šop niti za okras; cof: čopi na zavesi; kapa s čopom / konji z belimi čopi na glavah ◊ …
53çöp — is. 1. Taxta, ağac, saman və s. parçacığı. Dişini çöplə təmizləmək. – Gəldiyev əlindəki kibrit çöpünü nəm çəkmiş zərflərin böyründən salır, bura bura açırdı. M. C.. 2. Bədənin bir yerinə batmış belə qırıntı, tikan və s. <Səkinə Güllüyə:>… …
54cop — 1. tv. to take or steal something. (Originally underworld.) □ Somebody copped the statue from the town square. □ Who copped the salt from this table? 2. n. a theft. (Underworld.) □ They pulled the cop in broad daylight …
55cop to — accept or admit to there are a lot of people who don t cop to their past * * * cop to [phrasal verb] cop to (something) US slang : to admit to doing (something) He agreed to cop to a misdemeanor. • • • Main Entry: ↑cop …
56cop — v. (colloq.) (esp. AE) (D; intr.) to cop out of ( to renege on ) (to cop out of a responsibility) * * * [kɒp] (colloq.) (esp. AE) (D; intr.) to cop out of (to cop out of a responsibility; to renege on ) …
57cop — {{11}}cop (n.) policeman, 1859, abbreviation of earlier COPPER (Cf. copper) (n.2), 1846, from COP (Cf. cop) (v.). {{12}}cop (v.) 1704, northern British dialect, to seize, to catch, perhaps ultimately from M.Fr. caper seize, to take, from L.… …
58cop — 1) n a police officer. A shortening of copper. In Britain, until the 1960s cop was felt to be an Americanism and only in the late 1980s did it find its way into print, albeit in the gutter press. ► Don t cry/Gotta go bye bye/SUDDENLY: DIE DIE/COP …
59COP — an abbreviation for coefficient of performance, a measure of the efficiency of heat pumps, air conditioners, refrigerators, and freezers. The COP is the ratio of the useful energy output of the system (the amount of heat energy added to or… …
60cop — A short form of ‘copper’, used in informal speech in both Britain and America to describe a policeman. ‘Listen, cop, I don’t know nuthin’,’ says a young American in Waterfront, by Budd Schulberg. The same speaker also addresses the policeman… …