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chap
1[chap]
verb (used with object)
to crack, roughen, and redden (the skin).
The windy, cold weather chapped her lips.
to cause (the ground, wood, etc.) to split, crack, or open in clefts.
The summer heat and drought chapped the riverbank.
verb (used without object)
to become chapped.
noun
a fissure or crack, especially in the skin.
Scot., a knock; rap.
chap
2[chap]
noun
Chiefly British Informal: Older Use., a fellow; man or boy.
Chiefly Midland and Southern U.S., a baby or young child.
British Dialect., a customer.
chap
3[chop, chap]
noun
Usually chaps chop.
chap.
4abbreviation
Chaplain.
chapter.
chap
1/ tʃæp /
verb
(of the skin) to make or become raw and cracked, esp by exposure to cold
(of a clock) to strike (the hour)
to knock (at a door, window, etc)
noun
(usually plural) a cracked or sore patch on the skin caused by chapping
a knock
chap.
2abbreviation
chaplain
chapter
chap
3/ tʃæp /
noun
informal, a man or boy; fellow
chap
4/ tʃɒp, tʃæp /
noun
a less common word for chop 3
Other Word Forms
- unchapped adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of chap1
Origin of chap2
Example Sentences
He added: "I have no idea what's happening to this poor chap's foals. I do feel his pain. I would suggest he's looking in the wrong direction for the culprit."
She described her brother as a "gregarious chap" with a "very warm personality" and "infectious laugh".
“Dominick Lopez!” the announcer cries, and out sprints a sheep carrying Dominick, his chaps flapping.
Gen. Harrison Gray Otis, the famously combative owner of the Los Angeles Times, published an editorial in 1882 warning: “Don’t feed the worthless chaps. It only encourages them in their idleness and viciousness.”
Despite it being near 90 degrees at the Monnaie De Paris, attendees showed up in fur stoles and leather chaps over jeans.
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