v
(obsolete) To cause to fall heavily; to precipitate.
v
(intransitive) To slowly become limp; to bend gradually.
v
(idiomatic) To arrive casually and unannounced, with little or no warning; also, to visit without an appointment.
n
(idiomatic) A very small or insignificant amount; something of little importance.
n
(idiomatic) A very small or insignificant amount; something of little importance.
n
(idiomatic) A very small or insignificant amount; something of little importance.
v
(humorous) To name-drop Harvard as the university that one attends.
v
(US, intransitive) To drop one's trousers and/or undershorts; to moon.
n
(US, transport) Synonym of drop lot
adj
(chiefly American spelling, nonstandard) Alternative spelling of droppable. [Capable of being dropped (especially by an aircraft).]
n
(humorous) A notional medical condition that causes people to drop things frequently.
n
Alternative form of drop-off [A sudden downward slope.]
n
The action of one who drops in.
v
obsolete spelling of dropped; simple past tense and past participle of drop
n
A drop falling from the eaves of a building; an eavesdrop.
adj
(literary) Killed in battle.
v
(transitive) To cause to drop heavily.
n
(medicine, dated) drop (as a measurement in medical prescriptions)
v
Alternative spelling of name-drop [(transitive, intransitive) To casually mention a well-known or illustrious person or the titles of their works, often implying familiarity or association, especially in order to impress others, increase one's status, or to appear knowledgeable or fashionable.]
v
Alternative spelling of name-drop [(transitive, intransitive) To casually mention a well-known or illustrious person or the titles of their works, often implying familiarity or association, especially in order to impress others, increase one's status, or to appear knowledgeable or fashionable.]
n
Synonym of Rupert's drop
n
A language that leaves out certain pronouns in situations usually specific to the language or language family, such as Spanish and Persian which frequently drop subject-form pronouns.
adj
(linguistics, of a language) In which certain classes of pronoun may be omitted when they can be inferred.
v
(transitive) To let fall as, or like, rain.
v
(transitive, slang) To cause to collapse; to hit hard; to render unsconscious; to kill.
v
(intransitive) to fall from the sky, as snow
v
(idiomatic) To appear, seemingly from nowhere.
n
Alternative form of yod dropping [(phonology) The elision of the sound [j] in English phonology following other consonantal sounds within the same syllable in certain contexts.]
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