POOP


Meaning of POOP in English

I. ˈpüp verb

( -ed/-ing/-s )

Etymology: Middle English poupen, of imitative origin

intransitive verb

1.

a. : to make a short jarring sound : toot a horn ; also : gulp

b.

(1) : to shoot a gun

(2) : to make loud bangings (as a gun)

2. : to emit intestinal gas — usually considered vulgar

transitive verb

: to cause to discharge : fire

we pooped off a salvo in the direction of the sound — S.H.Baker

II. noun

( -s )

1. : a short jarring sound : gulp , toot

2.

a. : an act of defecation — usually used with take ; usually considered vulgar

b. : intestinal gas expelled through the anus — usually considered vulgar

III. noun

( -s )

Etymology: Middle French poupe, from Latin puppis

1. obsolete : the afterpart of a ship : stern

2.

a. : an enclosed superstructure at the afterpart of a ship above the main deck often in ships of the 16th and 17th centuries raised to a great height

b. : poop deck

IV. transitive verb

( -ed/-ing/-s )

1. : to break over the poop or stern of

the huge seas are beginning to poop her very badly — Raymond McFarland

2. : to ship (a sea or wave) over the stern

outside in the ocean there is serious danger in pooping a following wave — H.A.Calahan

V. transitive verb

( -ed/-ing/-s )

Etymology: origin unknown

obsolete : to practice deceit upon : cheat , cozen

VI. ˈpüp noun

( -s )

Etymology: short for nincompoop

: a foolish or useless person

regarded by many as a pompous old poop — H.A.Smith

VII. verb

( -ed/-ing/-s )

Etymology: origin unknown

transitive verb

slang : to put out of breath or wind thoroughly ; also : to wear out : exhaust

those last eight miles just pooped everybody — Infantry Journal

found himself completely pooped

intransitive verb

: to become exhausted : cease completely — often used with out

this ivy was green at a time when other ivies had pooped out — New Yorker

VIII. noun

( -s )

Etymology: origin unknown

slang : official or unofficial information

gave us all the poop he had gathered from his usual reliable sources

IX. intransitive verb

Etymology: poop (I)

: defecate — used as a euphemism

X. noun

Etymology: poop (II)

: excrement — used as a euphemism

Webster's New International English Dictionary.      Новый международный словарь английского языка Webster.