English edit

Pronunciation edit

Verb edit

mopped

  1. simple past and past participle of mop

Adjective edit

mopped (not comparable)

  1. (humorous, in combination) Haired.
    • 1997, Neil Slaven, Electric Don Quixote: The Definitive Story Of Frank Zappa, London: Omnibus Press, published 2009, →ISBN:
      There was more in the same vein before an anti-climactic conclusion: “This horror is obviously a satire of today’s long-mopped singing groups, but it has failed. It is in a class by itself – if it can be classified.”
    • 2002, Dorothy Cave, chapter 11, in Song on a Blue Guitar, Santa Fe, N.M.: Sunstone Press, →ISBN, page 93:
      So when JD Emmenthaler lit from Dallas with ginger hair, black boots, tan Stetson, and wads of long green money, no one on either side of the village took much notice of him, his blonde-mopped wife Narcissa with her red Corvette she sashayed all over La Mancha in, or his small son Travis, except to note that the latter was a snotty little ass.
    • 2014, Sean Madigan Hoen, Songs Only You Know: A Memoir, New York, N.Y.: Soho Press, Inc., →ISBN:
      Tall, dapper, brown-mopped Will was the closest thing I had to a brother.

Anagrams edit