D defs.my
Entry 14 senses · 3 variants Webster, 1913

Crop

/(krŏp)/ · IPA /kɹɑp/
01 n. The pouchlike enlargement of the gullet of birds, serving as a receptacle for food; the craw.
  1. 1.
    The pouchlike enlargement of the gullet of birds, serving as a receptacle for food; the craw.
  2. 2.
    The top, end, or highest part of anything, especially of a plant or tree.[Obs.]
  3. 3.
    That which is cropped, cut, or gathered from a single felld, or of a single kind of grain or fruit, or in a single season; especially, the product of what is planted in the earth; fruit; harvest.
    “Lab'ring the soil, and reaping plenteous crop, Corn, wine, and oil.” Milton.
  4. 4.
    Grain or other product of the field while standing.
  5. 5.
    Anything cut off or gathered.
    “Guiltless of steel, and from the razor free, It falls a plenteous crop reserved for thee.” Dryden.
  6. 6.
    Hair cut close or short, or the act or style of so cutting; as, a convict's crop.
  7. 7.
    A projecting ornament in carved stone. Specifically, a finial.(Arch.) [Obs.]
  8. 8.
    Tin ore prepared for smelting.(Mining.)
  9. 9.
    A riding whip with a loop instead of a lash.
Phrases & compounds
Neck and crop — altogether; roughly and at once.
02 v. t. To cut off the tops or tips of; to bite or pull off; to browse; to pluck; to mow; to reap.
imp. & p. p. Cropped; p. pr. & vb. n. Cropping
  1. 1.
    To cut off the tops or tips of; to bite or pull off; to browse; to pluck; to mow; to reap.
    “I will crop off from the top of his young twigs a tender one.” — Ezek. xvii. 22.
  2. 2.
    Fig.: To cut off, as if in harvest.
    “Death . . . .crops the growing boys.” — Creech.
  3. 3.
    To cause to bear a crop; as, to crop a field.
  4. 4.
    to cut off an unnecessary portion at the edges; -- of photographs and other two-dimensional images; as, to crop her photograph up to the shoulders.
03 v. i. To yield harvest.
  1. 1.
    To yield harvest.
Phrases & compounds
To crop out — To appear above the surface, as a seam or vein, or inclined bed, as of coal.
To crop up — to sprout; to spring up; to appear suddenly.