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chop verb [ tʃɒp ]

• cut (something) into pieces with repeated sharp blows of an axe or knife.
• "they chopped up the pulpit for firewood"
Similar: cut up, cut into pieces, chop up, cube, dice, mince, hash, hew, split, cleave,
• abolish or reduce the size of (something) in a way regarded as ruthless.
• "their training courses are to be chopped"
Similar: reduce drastically, cut, abolish, scrap, axe, slash,

chop noun

• a downward cutting blow or movement, typically with the hand.
• "an effective chop to the back of the neck"
• dismissal from employment.
• "hundreds more workers have been given the chop"
Similar: notice, one's marching orders, the sack, the boot, the (old) heave-ho, the push, the bullet, one's cards, the elbow,
• a thick slice of meat, especially pork or lamb, adjacent to and often including a rib.
• "he lived on liver or chops"
• a person's share of something.
• crushed or ground grain used as animal feed.
• "the pile of chop was dropped into the calves' feeder"
• the broken motion of water, owing to the action of the wind against the tide.
• "we started our run into a two-foot chop"
Origin: late Middle English: variant of chap1.

chop noun

• a trademark; a brand of goods.
Origin: early 19th century: from Hindi chāp ‘stamp, brand’ (see chaap).

chop verb

• eat.
• "come chop the soup I made for you"
• acquire (money) quickly or easily, typically by dishonest means.
• "we're chopping money like we're just plucking it from a tree"

chop noun

• a small dish that can conveniently be eaten with the fingers, typically served as an appetizer.
• "wedding guests have come to expect a good selection of mouth-watering small chops"
Origin: of uncertain origin.

chop logic

• argue in a tiresomely pedantic way; quibble.


not much chop

• unsatisfactory.
"that veranda's not much chop in bad weather"



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