Cop vs Sop - What's the difference?
cop | sop |
to obtain, to purchase (as in drugs), to get hold of, to take
* 2005 , Martin Torgoff, Can't Find My Way Home , Simon & Schuster, page 10:
to (be forced to) take; to receive; to shoulder; to bear, especially blame or punishment for a particular instance of wrongdoing.
to steal
to adopt
to admit, especially to a crime.
*
(crafts) The ball of thread wound on to the spindle in a spinning machine.
(obsolete) The top, summit, especially of a hill.
* Drayton
(obsolete) The head.
A tube or quill upon which silk is wound.
(architecture, military) A merlon.
Something entirely soaked.
* Shakespeare
A piece of solid food to be soaked in liquid food.
* Bible, John xiii. 26
* Francis Bacon
Something given or done to pacify or bribe.
* L'Estrange
A weak, easily frightened or ineffectual person; a milksop
Gravy. (Appalachian)
(obsolete) A thing of little or no value.
To steep or dip in any liquid.
* {{quote-book
, year = 1928
, title = American Negro Folk-Songs
, first = Newman Ivey
, last = White
, location = Cambridge
, publisher = Harvard University Press
, page = 227
, pageurl = http://books.google.com/books?id=WCuuV-kRe70C&pg=PA277&dq=sop
, passage = When I die, don't bury me deep, / Put a jug of 'lasses at my feet, / And a piece of corn bread in my hand, / Gwine to sop my way to the promised land.
}}
* {{quote-news
, date = 1945-12-27
, title = Sopping Bread May Be Done
, first = Emily
, last = Post
, authorlink = Emily Post
, newspaper = The Spokesman-Review
, url = http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1314&id=snRWAAAAIBAJ&pg=5333,6920966
, passage = So again let me say that sopping bread into gravy can be done properly merely by putting a piece down on the gravy and then soaking it with the help of a knife and fork as though it were any other food. But taking a soft piece of bread and pushing it under the sauce with your fingers, submerging them as well as the bread, or even wiping the plate with it would be very bad manners indeed.
}}
In obsolete terms the difference between cop and sop
is that cop is the head while sop is a thing of little or no value.As an initialism SOP is
initialism of State of Palestine|lang=en.cop
English
Etymology 1
From (etyl) coppe, from (etyl) . More at (l).Etymology 2
Possibly from (etyl) , from (etyl) kapia, to buy.Verb
(copp)- Heroin appeared on the streets of our town for the first time, and Innie watched helplessly as his sixteen-year-old brother began taking the train to Harlem to cop smack.
- When caught, he would often cop a vicious blow from his father
- No need to cop an attitude with me, junior.
- I already copped to the murder. What else do you want from me?
- Harold copped to being known as "Dirty Harry".
Derived terms
* cop a feel * cop a plea * cop off * cop on * cop out, cop-outEtymology 3
Short for above, i.e. a criminal.Synonyms
* See alsoEtymology 4
(etyl) cop, copp, from (etyl) . Cognate with Dutch kop, German Kopf.Noun
(en noun)- Cop they used to call / The tops of many hills.
Anagrams
*References
*See also
* not much cop ----sop
English
Noun
(en noun)- The bounded waters / Should lift their bosoms higher than the shores, / And make a sop of all this solid globe.
- He it is to whom I shall give a sop , when I have dipped it.
- Sops in wine, quantity for quantity, inebriate more than wine itself.
- All nature is cured with a sop .
- (Piers Plowman)
