rope

[rohp] /roʊp/
noun
1.
a strong, thick line or cord, commonly one composed of twisted or braided strands of hemp, flax, or the like, or of wire or other material.
2.
a lasso.
3.
ropes.
  1. the cords used to enclose a prize ring or other space.
  2. Informal. the operations of a business or the details of any undertaking:
    The new employee didn't take long to learn the ropes.
4.
a hangman's noose, halter, or cord.
5.
the sentence or punishment of death by hanging.
6.
a quantity of material or a number of things twisted or strung together in the form of a cord:
a rope of tobacco.
7.
a stringy, viscid, or glutinous formation in a liquid:
ropes of slime.
verb (used with object), roped, roping.
8.
to tie, bind, or fasten with a rope.
9.
to enclose, partition, or mark off with a rope or ropes (often followed by off).
10.
to catch with a lasso; lasso.
11.
Nautical. to reinforce (a sail or awning) with a boltrope.
verb (used without object), roped, roping.
12.
to be drawn out into a filament of thread; become ropy.
Verb phrases
13.
rope in, Informal. to lure or entice, especially by employing deception:
The swindler had roped in a number of gullible persons.
Idioms
14.
at the end of one's rope, at the end of one's endurance or means; at the limit:
With all her savings gone and bills piling up, she was at the end of her rope.
15.
give someone enough rope, to allow a person complete freedom to continue his or her misdeeds in hope that retribution will follow.
16.
on the ropes,
  1. Boxing. in a defenseless position, as leaning against the ropes to keep from falling.
  2. Informal. in a desperate or hopeless position; close to defeat or failure:
    By repeatedly undercutting his prices, his competitors soon had him on the ropes.
Origin
before 900; (noun) Middle English rop(e), rap(e), Old English rāp; cognate with Dutch reep, German Reif; (v.) Middle English, derivative of the noun
Related forms
roper, noun
ropelike, adjective
unroped, adjective
Examples from the web for rope
  • There was a line of people standing behind a red rope waiting to get in.
  • The simple secret is an inexpensive rope light wrapped in dried corn husks.
  • Before planting, test out possible outlines for your border with a rope or hose.
  • Make a rope out of the lint and tuck it under the foliage where it doesn't show, she says.
  • He straps on a pair of steel spurs and hefts a coil of thick rope.
  • We tied a rope to a clump of serviceberry bushes and slid down it, leaving the rope in place for our return.
  • One lone rope was found trailing in the water, not hooked up to any rigging, with the ends frayed.
  • If you put a boat fender out on a rope, he'd hold it in his mouth and play tug-of-war, gently enough not to destroy the fender.
  • Next to the equipment two more boys jumped rope, their bare feet bouncing in rhythm on the cracked concrete.
  • Each family's small lot is neatly marked off with rope.
British Dictionary definitions for rope

rope

/rəʊp/
noun
1.
  1. a fairly thick cord made of twisted and intertwined hemp or other fibres or of wire or other strong material
  2. (as modifier): a rope bridge, a rope ladder
2.
a row of objects fastened or united to form a line: a rope of pearls, a rope of onions
3.
a quantity of material twisted or wound in the form of a cord
4.
anything in the form of a filament or strand, esp something viscous or glutinous: a rope of slime
5.
the rope
  1. a rope, noose, or halter used for hanging
  2. death by hanging, strangling, etc
6.
give someone enough rope to hang himself, to allow someone to accomplish his own downfall by his own foolish acts
7.
know the ropes
  1. to have a thorough understanding of a particular sphere of activity
  2. to be experienced in the ways of the world
8.
on the ropes
  1. (boxing) driven against the ropes enclosing the ring by an opponent's attack
  2. in a defenceless or hopeless position
verb
9.
(transitive) to bind or fasten with or as if with a rope
10.
(transitive) usually foll by off. to enclose or divide by means of a rope
11.
(intransitive) to become extended in a long filament or thread
12.
(mountaineering) when intr, foll by up. to tie (climbers) together with a rope
See also rope in
Word Origin
Old English rāp; related to Old Saxon rēp, Old High German reif
Word Origin and History for rope
n.

Old English rap "rope, cord, cable," from Proto-Germanic *raipaz (cf. Old Norse reip, West Frisian reap, Middle Dutch, Dutch reep "rope," Old Frisian silrap "shoe-thong," Gothic skauda-raip "shoe-lace," Old High German, German reif "ring, hoop"). Technically, only cordage above one inch in circumference and below 10 (bigger-around than that is a cable). Nautical use varies. Finnish raippa "hoop, rope, twig" is a Germanic loan-word.

To know the ropes (1840, Dana) originally is a seaman's term. Phrase on the ropes "defeated" is attested from 1924, a figurative extension from the fight ring, where ropes figure from 1829. To be at the end of (one's) rope "out of resources and options" is first attested 1680s. Formerly also in many slang and extended uses related to punishment by hanging, e.g. John Roper's window "a noose," rope-ripe "deserving to be hanged," both 16c. To give someone (enough) rope (to hang himself) is from 1650s.

v.

c.1300, "bind with a rope," from rope (n.). Meaning "mark off with rope" is from 1738; to rope (someone or something) in is from 1848. Related: Roped; roping.

Slang definitions & phrases for rope

rope

noun
  1. A cigar; el ropo, hemp (1934+)
  2. A hard-hit line drive; clothesline, frozen rope (1960s+ Baseball)
verb
  1. (also rope in) To ensnare someone with amity and concern as a means of swindling; rope in (1848+)
  2. : Surhoff roped an RBI double to the gap in left-center
Related Terms

goat fuck, go piss up a rope, know the ropes, suck


Idioms and Phrases with rope

rope

In addition to the idiom beginning with
rope