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====Translations====
====Translations====
{{trans-top|young dog, etc.}}
{{trans-top|young dog, etc.}}
* Arabic: {{t|ar|جَرْو|m}}, {{q|especially for dogs}}, {{t|ar|غَلْو|m}} {{q|for a wolf}}, {{t|ar|هِجْرِس|m}} {{q|for a fox}}
* Arabic: {{t|ar|جَرْو|m}} {{q|especially for dogs}}, {{t|ar|غَلْو|m}} {{q|for a wolf}}, {{t|ar|هِجْرِس|m}} {{q|for a fox}}
* Asturian: {{t+|ast|cachorru}}
* Asturian: {{t+|ast|cachorru}}
* Bengali: {{t+|bn|কুত্তার বাচ্চা}}
* Bengali: {{t+|bn|কুত্তার বাচ্চা}}

Revision as of 23:18, 26 September 2024

See also: púp, Pup, and PUP

English

English Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia

Etymology

Clipping of puppy.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /pʌp/
  • Audio (US):(file)
  • Rhymes: -ʌp

Noun

pup (plural pups)

  1. A young dog, wolf, fox, seal, bat or shark, or the young of certain other animals.
    The dog has had that bed since he was just a pup.
  2. A young, inexperienced person.
    The new teacher is a mere pup.
  3. Any cute dog, regardless of age.
    My pup likes to run as fast as he can, yet cannot always stop in time!
  4. A short semi-trailer used jointly with a dolly and another semi-trailer to create a twin trailer.
  5. (horticulture) A new plant growing from a shoot that can be used for propagation.
  6. (film, television) A kind of small spotlight.
    • 1976, A. Arthur Englander, Paul Petzold, Filming for Television, page 191:
      For a scene like the Highgate exhumation night sequence suitable equipment would consist of: two brutes on Molevators, three 10 K lights also on Molevators and, for good measure, two 5 Ks, four 2 Ks, two pups (1000 W), two North lights []
    • 2003, Christopher Neame, Rungs on a Ladder: Hammer Films Seen Through a Soft Gauze, page 23:
      Spots were also used for the foreground, usually the smaller type like a “pup,” which could be repositioned quickly for different setups.
  7. (chiefly US, newspapers, publishing) An early edition of a periodical publication, intended for distribution to distant locations.
    Coordinate term: bulldog edition
  8. (sex, slang) Someone who participates in pup play (the sexual practice of role-playing as a young dog).
    • 2017 April 23, “Success Failure”, in Silicon Valley, season 4, episode 1, spoken by Russ Hanneman (Chris Diamantopoulos):
      It could be any dude, as long as you really want to fuck him. It could be a... a twink, a bear, an otter, a circuit queen, a chub, a pup, a gipster, a daddy chaser, a leatherman, a ladyboy, a Donald Duck. Donald Duck's a gay guy who's been kicked out of the Navy.
    • 2019 February 5, Mike Miksche, “Teaching Young Dogs Old Tricks”, in Slate[1], New York, N.Y.: The Slate Group, →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 2024-06-22:
      Mentorship, I learned from the Fog City pups, plays a huge role in their family business, where the pack hierarchy comes into play.
    • 2019 April 29, Christie Blatchford, “Christie Blatchford: What ’puppy play’ enthusiasts do behind closed doors shouldn’t be for our reading pleasure”, in National Post[2], Toronto, Ont.: Postmedia Network Canada Corp., →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 23 June 2024:
      (Pups are apparently different from "furries," who dress up in animal suits. And they are both different from "bunnies," which the author didn't explain and which I have neither heart nor stomach to Google.)

Derived terms

Translations

Verb

pup (third-person singular simple present pups, present participle pupping, simple past and past participle pupped)

  1. (intransitive) To give birth to pups.

Translations

See also

Anagrams

Amanab

Noun

pup

  1. broom

Aromanian

Noun

pup m (plural pupi, feminine equivalent pupã)

  1. baby, infant

Derived terms

Polish

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /pup/
  • Rhymes: -up
  • Syllabification: pup

Noun

pup f

  1. genitive plural of pupa

Romanian

Etymology 1

Regressively derived from the verb pupa.

Noun

pup m (plural pupi)

  1. (informal, familiar, childish) kiss
    Synonym: sărut
Declension
Derived terms

Etymology 2

Uncertain; possibly an expressive formation (variant of pop; cf. also coc), or a substratum term (compare Albanian pupë (bud)), or less likely linked to (Vulgar) Latin puppa (teat, nipple). More likely ultimately from Proto-Slavic *pǫpъ (compare Serbo-Croatian pup (bud)) or Hungarian pup, although this would only explain one of the senses.

Noun

pup m (plural pupi) (regional, uncommon)

  1. bud
    Synonym: mugur
  2. something rounded or mound-like; hump, hunch; mound
    Synonym: gheb
  3. morel (mushroom)
    Synonym: zbârciog
  4. freckle; mole; birthmark
    Synonyms: pistrui, aluniță
Declension

Serbo-Croatian

Etymology

Inherited from Proto-Slavic *pǫpъ (Russian пуп (pup), Polish pęp).

Pronunciation

Noun

pȕp m (Cyrillic spelling пу̏п)

  1. bud, burgeon

Declension

References

  • pup” in Hrvatski jezični portal

Volapük

Noun

pup

  1. doll, puppet