crap
pronunciation
How to pronounce crap in British English: UK [kræp]
How to pronounce crap in American English: US [kræp]
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- Noun:
- obscene terms for feces
- obscene words for unacceptable behavior
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- Verb:
- have a bowel movement
Word Origin
- crap (v.)
- "defecate," 1846, from one of a cluster of words generally applied to things cast off or discarded (such as "weeds growing among corn" (early 15c.), "residue from renderings" (late 15c.), underworld slang for "money" (18c.), and in Shropshire, "dregs of beer or ale"), all probably from Middle English crappe "grain that was trodden underfoot in a barn, chaff" (mid-15c.), from Middle French crape "siftings," from Old French crappe, from Medieval Latin crappa, crapinum "chaff." Related: Crapped; crapping. Despite folk etymology insistence, not from Thomas Crapper (1837-1910) who was, however, a busy plumber and may have had some minor role in the development of modern toilets. The name Crapper is a northern form of Cropper (attested from 1221), an occupational surname, obviously, but the exact reference is unclear. Crap (v.) as a variant of crop (v.) was noted early 19c, as a peculiarity of speech in Scotland and the U.S. Southwest (Arkansas, etc.). Draw out yere sword, thou vile South'ron! Red wat wi' blude o' my kin! That sword it crapped the bonniest flower E'er lifted its head to the sun! [Allan Cunningham (1784-1842), "The Young Maxwell"]
- crap (n.)
- "act of defecation," 1898; see crap (v.). Sense of "rubbish, nonsense" also first recorded 1898.
Example
- 1. They 're making your crap that way today .
- 2. Bing : just a bunch of crap .
- 3. Then you won 't buy so much crap .
- 4. And then you feel like crap .
- 5. We are prisoners of our phones and tablets and all our digital crap .