boop

noun
/buːp/

Etymology

Altered form of German Bub.

  1. derived from Bub

Definitions

  1. A low-pitched beeping sound.

    • When something important happened, a polite sort of boop went off, and up in the right-hand corner of your screen, above the copy, a word or two appeared: Urgent, Bulletin, Late Stocks, whatever.
    • Originally, computers' attempts at making music were recognizable by their beeps and boops and weird swoops. And to suggest that the rhythms laid down by a^([sic]) electronic drummer were anything close to swingin' was humorous.
    • Guitars riffle precise chords and lilt through arpeggios, keyboards go boop, and every flick of a drumbeat is in place.
  2. A gentle or playful tap or strike, especially on the nose.

    • “Boop, on the nose! Boop, on the nose! Boop, on the nose!” “He's bypassing our shields. We can't take many more boops.” “Thanks to Father giving me full access to Starfleet data systems, I know all possible shield frequencies. Boop!”
  3. To produce a low-pitched beeping sound.

    • The music on “LP” is almost entirely unnatural, booping and puffing, buzzing and ticking in tones no acoustic instrument would make.
  4. + 2 more definitions
    1. To strike gently or playfully

      To strike gently or playfully; to bop (especially on the nose).

      • He spun around and booped me on the nose.
    2. A surname from German.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for boop. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA