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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 3( def 1 ).
chap.
4abbreviation for
- Chaplain.
- chapter.
chap.
1abbreviation for
- chaplain
- chapter
chap
2/ 迟蕛忙辫 /
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
3/ 迟蕛忙辫 /
noun
- informal.a man or boy; fellow
chap
4/ t蕛蓲p; 迟蕛忙辫 /
noun
- a less common word for chop 3
Other 亚洲网紅露点 Forms
- 耻苍路肠丑补辫辫别诲顎 adjective
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of chap1
Origin of chap2
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of chap1
Origin of chap2
Example Sentences
And to answer Roan鈥檚 initial 鈥渃haps鈥 question, there are some country singers, both historical and contemporary, who most definitely recognize the genre鈥檚 queer possibilities.
鈥淭he chaps there, we call them,鈥 he said, a term I had never heard for chapines 鈥 Guatemalans.
If untended, it has below the green top what some people call 鈥減etticoats鈥 of dead leaves, but I think they look like those furry chaps that silent movie cowboys used to wear.
Remembering her stepson as "an amazing chap", Ms Dyche, who lives near Leominster, said: "He only had to walk into the house and it put a smile on my face."
"He is just as funny off stage as he is on stage, a great chap, I like him," said David.
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