See also: love tap

English edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

love +‎ tap

Noun edit

lovetap (plural lovetaps)

  1. A light punch or other rough tap, performed in a friendly or affectionate manner.
    Why am I in trouble for hitting him? It was just a lovetap! See, he's not hurt.
    • 1911, S. Ella Wood Dean, Love's Purple, page 264:
      It was out of all precedent for us to do anything of that kind, for often on our honeymoon, when inspired to give him a love-tap or a fervent kiss, my husband would say: “Oh, spare me that, if there is anything more disgusting in a wife than such constant demonstrations let me know it.”
  2. (by extension) A strike or collision with relatively little force, or causing relatively little damage.
    • 1824, James Fenimore Cooper, The Pilot: A Tale of the Sea, page 363:
      Surely you forget the manner in which my hospitality has already been requited [] with a love-tap received over the shoulders of one of my men, by so gentle an instrument as the butt of a musket!
    • 1967, Richard Brautigan, A Confederate General from Big Sur, page 97:
      She hadn’t hit her head very hard. It was only a love tap compared to some of the bone-crushing smashes I’d seen delivered against those beams.
    • 2006, Dan Margulis, Professional Photoshop: The Classic Guide to Color Correction, 5th edition, page 81:
      The car in Figure 2.7 has just been involved in an accident. [] An insurance adjuster must now decide whether this was a mere love tap or something that requires authorizing thousands of dollars for a new fender.