Chap
Pronunciation
- IPA: /tʃæp/
- Rhymes: -æp
Origin 1
Shortened from chapman ("dealer, customer") in 16th century English.
Full definition of chap
Noun
chap
(plural chaps)- (dated except UK and Australia) A man, a fellow.
- 1913, Joseph C. Lincoln, Mr. Pratt's Patients Chapter 1, A chap named Eleazir Kendrick and I had chummed in together the summer afore and built a fish-weir and shanty at Setuckit Point, down Orham way. For a spell we done pretty well.
- 1963, Margery Allingham, The China Governess Chapter 20, ‘No. I only opened the door a foot and put my head in. The street lamps shine into that room. I could see him. He was all right. Sleeping like a great grampus. Poor, poor chap.’
- Who’s that chap over there?
- (UK, dialectal) A customer, a buyer.
- SteeleIf you want to sell, here is your chap.
- (Southern US) A child.
Usage notes
This word's existence in the US can be seen in the Pennsylvania German term Tschaepp ("guy").
Synonyms
Origin 2
Related to chip.
Verb
- (intransitive) Of the skin, to split or flake due to cold weather or dryness.
- (transitive) To cause to open in slits or chinks; to split; to cause the skin of to crack or become rough.
- BlackmoreThen would unbalanced heat licentious reign,
Crack the dry hill, and chap the russet plain. - LylyNor winter's blast chap her fair face.
- (Scotland, northern England) To strike, knock.
- 2008, James Kelman, Kieron Smith, Boy, Penguin 2009, p. 35:The door was shut into my class. I had to chap it and then Miss Rankine came and opened it and gived me an angry look ....
Noun
chap
(plural chaps)Derived terms
Origin 3
From Northern English chafts ("jaws").
Noun
chap
(plural chaps)- (archaic) The jaw (often in plural).
- 1610, , by ShakespeareThis wide-chapp'd rascal—would thou might'st lie drowning
The washing of ten tides! - CowleyHis chaps were all besmeared with crimson blood.
- ShakespeareHe unseamed him from the nave to the chaps.
- One of the jaws or cheeks of a vice, etc.