dop
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
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From Middle English doppe, from Old English *doppa (“dipper”) (compare diepan), as in Old English dūfedoppa (“pelican”).
dop (plural dops)
From Middle English doppen, from Old English *doppian (“to dip, dive, plunge”), related to Old English doppettan (“to dip, dip in, immerse”).
dop (third-person singular simple present dops, present participle dopping, simple past and past participle dopped)
From Dutch dop, from Middle Dutch dop, dup, doppe, from Old Dutch *dopp, *dupp, from Proto-West Germanic *dupp, from Proto-Germanic *duppaz (“hollow, shell, bowl”). Cognate with Saterland Frisian Dop (“shell, pod, bowl”), German Topf (“pot”).
dop (plural dops)
dop (third-person singular simple present dops, present participle dopping, simple past and past participle dopped)
From Middle Dutch doppe, dup, from Old Dutch *dopp, *dupp, from Proto-West Germanic *dopp, *dupp, from Proto-Germanic *duppaz (“hollow, well, bowl”). Cognate with German Topf (“pot”).
dop m (plural doppen, diminutive dopje n)
See the etymology of the corresponding lemma form.
dop
dop
dop (first-person possessive dopku, second-person possessive dopmu, third-person possessive dopnya)
Borrowed from Transylvanian Saxon Dop (“stopper”).
dop n (plural dopuri)
From Middle Low German dōpe, from Old Saxon dōpi, from Proto-West Germanic *daupīni, from Proto-Germanic *daupīniz, from Proto-Indo-European *dʰewbʰ-.
dop n
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