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3.75
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traps noun [ traps ]

• personal belongings; baggage.
• "I was ready to pack my traps and leave"
Origin: early 19th century: perhaps a contraction of trappings.

trap noun

• a device or enclosure designed to catch and retain animals, typically by allowing entry but not exit or by catching hold of a part of the body.
• "the squirrels ravaged the saplings, despite the baited traps"
• a situation in which people lie in wait to make a surprise attack.
• "we were fed false information by a double agent and walked straight into a trap"
• a container or device used to collect something, or a place where something collects.
• "one fuel filter and water trap are sufficient on the fuel system"
• a light, two-wheeled carriage pulled by a horse or pony.
• a device for hurling an object such as a clay pigeon into the air to be shot at.
• short for trapdoor.
• a person's mouth (used in expressions to do with speaking).
• "keep your trap shut!"
Similar: mouth, jaws, lips, maw, chops, kisser, yap, gob, cakehole, mush, puss, bazoo, bake,
• (among jazz musicians) drums or percussion instruments.
• "I played the traps a little myself once"
• a type of hip-hop music typically characterized by a dark tone and rhythms involving low-pitched kick drums and a very fast hi-hat.
• "the LP will feature his raps over a wide range of electronic sounds from dubstep to trap"
• a place where drugs are sold.
• "a trap full of dealers"

trap verb

• catch (an animal) in a trap.
Similar: confine, catch, cut off, corner, pin down, drive into a corner, pen, hem in, close in, shut in, hedge in, imprison, hold captive,
• trick or deceive (someone) into doing something contrary to their interests or intentions.
• "I hoped to trap him into an admission"
Similar: trick, dupe, deceive, cheat, lure, inveigle, beguile, fool, hoodwink, seduce, cajole, wheedle, gull, catch out, trip up, outwit, outsmart, cozen,
Origin: Old English træppe (in coltetræppe ‘Christ's thorn’); related to Middle Dutch trappe and medieval Latin trappa, of uncertain origin. The verb dates from late Middle English.

trap verb

• put trappings on (a horse).
• "the horses were trapped with black velvet"
Origin: late Middle English: from the obsolete noun trap ‘trappings’, from Old French drap ‘drape’.

trap noun

• basalt or a similar dark, fine-grained igneous rock.
Origin: late 18th century: from Swedish trapp, from trappa ‘stair’ (because of the often stair-like appearance of its outcroppings).


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