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Sops   /sɑps/   Listen
Sops

noun
1.
Piece of solid food for dipping in a liquid.  Synonym: sop.



Sop

noun
1.
Piece of solid food for dipping in a liquid.  Synonym: sops.
2.
A concession given to mollify or placate.
3.
A prescribed procedure to be followed routinely.  Synonyms: standard operating procedure, standard procedure, standing operating procedure.
verb
(past & past part. sopped; pres. part. sopping)
1.
Give a conciliatory gift or bribe to.
2.
Be or become thoroughly soaked or saturated with a liquid.  Synonym: soak through.
3.
Dip into liquid.
4.
Cover with liquid; pour liquid onto.  Synonyms: douse, dowse, drench, soak, souse.



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"Sops" Quotes from Famous Books



... child, I wished to kill myself in order to vex others. I remember once having drunk the contents of a large ink-pot after being compelled by mamma to swallow a "panade," [Footnote: Bread stewed a long time in water and flavoured with a little butter and sugar, a kind of "sops" given to children in France.] because she imagined that panades were good for the health. Our nurse had told her my dislike to this form of nourishment, adding that every morning I emptied the panade into the slop-pail. I had, of course, ...
— My Double Life - The Memoirs of Sarah Bernhardt • Sarah Bernhardt

... America, and consequently before the use of sugar, they sweetened their [drink, &c.] with honey; as wee doe now with sugar. The name of honey-soppes yet remaines, but the use is almost worne out. (At Queen's College, Oxon, the cook treats the whole hall with honey-sops on Good Friday at dinner. - BISHOP TANNER.) Now, 1686, since the great increase of planting of sugar-canes in the Barbados, &c. sugar is but one third of the price it was at thirty yeares since. In the time of the Roman Catholique religion, when a world ...
— The Natural History of Wiltshire • John Aubrey

... said that they had found the law as it was written to be this: That whosoever impeacheth the Council of a town which was a bishop's seat, must do battle with five in the field, one after another; and that after every combat there should be given unto him fresh arms and horse, and three sops of bread, and a draught either of wine or of water, as he chose. And in this sentence which the twain pronounced, the other ...
— Chronicle Of The Cid • Various

... they stuck close to one another in knots and gangs. Some of them merry, wanton, and soft as so many milk-sops; others louring, grim, dogged, demure, and crabbed; all idle, mortal foes to business, spending half their time in sleeping and the rest in doing nothing, a rent-charge and dead unnecessary weight on the earth, as Hesiod saith; afraid, as we judged, ...
— Gargantua and Pantagruel, Complete. • Francois Rabelais

... those great shins of beef, their common diet, were the wonder of the age." Carlyle's advice when he read this passage in proof was characteristic:—"Modify a little: Frederick the Great was brought up on beer-sops; Robert Burns on oatmeal porridge; and Mahomet and the Caliphs conquered the world on barley meal." But the passage stood unmodified, in spite of Froude's regard for ...
— The Reign of Henry the Eighth, Volume 1 (of 3) • James Anthony Froude


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