flop

verb
/flɒp/UK/flɑp/US/flɔp/

Etymology

A variant capitalization of FLOP, a syllabic acronym of floating-point operations.

Definitions

  1. To fall heavily due to lack of energy.

    • He flopped down in front of the television, exhausted from work.
  2. To cause to drop heavily.

    • The tired mule flopped its ears forward and trudged on.
  3. To fail completely

    To fail completely; not to be successful at all (of a movie, play, book, song etc.).

    • The latest album flopped and so the studio canceled her contract.
  4. + 17 more definitions
    1. To pretend to be fouled in sports, such as basketball, hockey (the same as to dive in…

      To pretend to be fouled in sports, such as basketball, hockey (the same as to dive in soccer)

      • It starts with Chris Paul, because Blake didn't really used to flop like that, you know, last year.
      • While Stern chastised Vogel for on Thursday calling the Heat "the biggest flopping team in the NBA," he did intimate that he sees merit in the sentiment.
    2. To strike about with something broad and flat, as a fish with its tail, or a bird with…

      To strike about with something broad and flat, as a fish with its tail, or a bird with its wings; to rise and fall; to flap.

      • The brim of a hat flops.
    3. To have (a hand) using the community cards dealt on the flop.

      • Both players flopped sets! Cards dealt on the flop: Q95. Player A's hole cards: 55 (making three of a kind: 555). Player B's hole cards: QQ (making three of a kind: QQQ).
    4. To stay, sleep or live in a place.

      • […] not just the old material goal of "three hots and a place to flop," […]
      • They have opened up crypts and basements as immense pads where vagrant and impoverished hippies can flop for the night.
    5. To flip

      To flip; to reverse (an image).

      • The possibilities of this type of shot are almost limitless. By quartering the screen and duplicating and flopping the picture, a kaleidoscopic effect is achieved.
      • […] in order to flop the image left-to-right, or all printing will appear reversed.
    6. To deny someone parole.

      • I've been incarcerated going on 9½ years. I have never been back on the streets or given a chance to prove myself to society. Every time I would meet the parole board they would flop me telling me I would be a threat to society.
    7. A heavy, passive fall

      A heavy, passive fall; a plopping down.

    8. A complete failure, especially in the entertainment industry.

      • Well I know your little baby sister / She thinks that I'm a flop / But I guess that you know that it's true / I spent more time at the bottom than the top
    9. The first three cards turned face-up by the dealer in a community card poker game.

      • The flop didn't help you but probably did help the other hands.
      • Here are six tips to help you play successfully on the flop (the first three communal cards).
      • The strength of your hand now has nothing to do with how strong it may have been before the flop.
    10. Dung, as in cow-flop.

      • "Maybe as you think," he said, "because as I've the misfortune of an accidental slip on a cow-flop therefore I has the inability of an unborn babe, ...
      • ... cowpat or cow-flop, Cow dung, often used dry as heating fuel.
      • "Cow flop in a neat package is still cow flop. What did Cable stand to gain from the flood?"
    11. A flophouse.

      • He was kind of worn but the tooth said he'd never lost a fight or slept in a flop.
    12. Indicating the sound of something flopping.

      • "One step. Steady. Another step. Flop! I got him!"
    13. Right, squarely, flat-out.

      • She fell flop on the floor.
    14. With a flopping sound.

    15. Abbreviation of floating-point operation.

      • The Correlator can perform 750 billion ‘flops’, or simple calculations, per second.
    16. One floating-point operation per second, a unit of measure of processor speed.

    17. Synonym of flop.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for flop. 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