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See also: trapé and trápě

English

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Etymology

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Perhaps via Medieval Latin *trappa, from Old English træppe, treppe (trap, snare), from Proto-Germanic *trap-, from Proto-Indo-European *dreb-, from *der- (to walk, step).

Pronunciation

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Noun

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trape (plural trapes)

  1. (obsolete) A messy or untidy woman.
    • 1678, Samuel Butler, Hudibras:
      Hard was his fate in this I own, / Nor will I for the trapes atone; / Indeed to guess I am not able, / What made her thus inexorable []

Verb

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trape (third-person singular simple present trapes, present participle traping, simple past and past participle traped)

  1. (intransitive) To drag.
    No, that coat's too big; it'll trape along the ground if you wear it.
    • 1920, Raymond S. Spears, chapter 6, in Diamond Tolls:
      "I expect that's right," Frest admitted. "You going to drop right down—or be you hunting and traping along? You'n Delia?"
  2. (intransitive) To run about idly or like a slattern.

Anagrams

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Old French

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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From Medieval Latin trappa, trapa, borrowed from Frankish *trappā. More at English trap.

Noun

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trape oblique singularf (oblique plural trapes, nominative singular trape, nominative plural trapes)

  1. trap (device design to ensnare or trap)
  2. hiding place

Descendants

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  • Middle French: trappe, trape

References

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Spanish

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Etymology

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Borrowed from French draper. Assimilated to trapo.

Noun

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trape m (plural trapes)

  1. (dated) intermediate fabric used to make drapery

Further reading

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