whop
from
The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
Whap \Whap\, Whop \Whop\, v. i. [Cf. OE. quappen to palpitate,
E. quob, quaver, wabble, awhape, wap.]
To throw one's self quickly, or by an abrupt motion; to turn
suddenly; as, she whapped down on the floor; the fish whapped
over. --Bartlett.
[1913 Webster]
Note: This word is used adverbially in the north of England,
as in the United States, when anything vanishes, or is
gone suddenly; as, whap went the cigar out of my mouth.
[1913 Webster] Whap
from
Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0
138 Moby Thesaurus words for "whop":
bang, bash, baste, bastinado, bat, batter, beat, beating, belabor,
belt, biff, birch, blank, blow, bonk, bop, buffet, bulldoze, bump,
burst, bust, cane, chop, clap, clash, clip, clobber, clout, club,
clump, coldcock, cowhide, crack, crash, cream, crump, cudgel, cut,
dash, deal, deal a blow, deck, defeat utterly, dig, dint, drub,
drubbing, drumming, fetch, fetch a blow, flagellate, flail, flap,
flog, flop, fusillade, fustigate, give a whipping, give the stick,
hammer, hit, hit a clip, horsewhip, jab, knock, knock cold,
knock down, knock out, knout, lace, lambaste, lash, lay on,
let have it, lick, overbear, overwhelm, paste, pelt, pistol-whip,
plunk, poke, pommel, pound, pummel, punch, rap, rawhide, report,
schmear, scourge, shellac, shut out, skunk, slam, slap, slat, slog,
slug, smack, smash, smear, smite, snap, snow under, soak, sock,
spank, splat, steamroller, strap, strike, strike at, stripe,
stroke, swap, swat, swing, swinge, swipe, switch, tap, tattoo,
thrash, thump, thwack, trounce, truncheon, wallop, whack, whale,
wham, whap, whelm, whip, whitewash, whomp, yerk
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