English

edit

Etymology

edit

Imitative; compare zap, zip.

Pronunciation

edit

Interjection

edit

zoop

  1. (colloquial) Sound effect suggesting rapid motion.
    • 1989, Charles A. Murray, Catherine Bly Cox, Apollo, the race to the moon, page 223:
      "Let me show you how this damn stuff explodes in pure oxygen," Johnson said, and turned on the projector. Markley was "totally aghast" himself. "It just went ZOOP! It was unbelievable. The stuff burned like you couldn't imagine."
    • 1999, School Library Journal, volume 45, numbers 1-6, page 180:
      On the day they play the Wild Things for the City Cup, he dons his gear (pulling on his underwear with a "zap" and his socks with a "zoop") and heads for the field.
    • 1999 November, Popular Photography:
      And a bit more manly (or womanly) turn of a long tripod screw in a shallow tripod socket and, zoop, through the socket end goes the tripod screw, right into the camera works. And this can also happen with inadequate metal tripod sockets []
    • 2010, Carolyn Godschild Miller, Soulmates:
      She'd tell me about one guy she'd kind of strung along without really meaning to, and zoop! Some of the glamour I'd been seeing in her would just vanish. Then she started in on the next one and again—zoop! Smaller still!

Anagrams

edit

Dutch

edit

Pronunciation

edit

Verb

edit

zoop

  1. singular past indicative of zuipen