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4-letter words that end in p

  • csmp — Continuous System Modeling Program
  • ctcp — (networking)   Client To Client Protocol
  • cusp — any of the small elevations on the grinding or chewing surface of a tooth
  • cuyp — Aelbert (ˈaːlbert). 1620–91, Dutch painter of landscapes and animals
  • d up — to set up a defence
  • damp — Something that is damp is slightly wet.
  • dbcp — a pesticide, CH2BrCHBrCH2Cl, thought to cause sterility
  • deep — If something is deep, it extends a long way down from the ground or from the top surface of something.
  • deop — (transitive, Internet) To demote (an IRC operator) from operator status.
  • depp — Johnny, full name John Christopher, born 1963, US actor; his films include Edward Scissorhands (1990), Sleepy Hollow (1999), and the Pirates of the Caribbean series (from 2003)
  • derp — a person or thing considered to be foolish or awkward.
  • dhcp — Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol
  • dimp — (UK, colloquial) (primarily Manchester) A small or short cigarette; by extension, the butt end of a cigarette, before it has been completely smoked; a half-smoked cigarette.
  • doop — Alternative form of dop (cup in which diamond is cut).
  • dorp — a village; hamlet.
  • doup — the bottom, end, or butt of something.
  • dowp — Alternative form of doup.
  • drip — to let drops fall; shed drops: This faucet drips.
  • drop — a small quantity of liquid that falls or is produced in a more or less spherical mass; a liquid globule.
  • dttp — either of two pyrimidine nucleotides used to synthesize DNA.
  • dump — to drop or let fall in a mass; fling down or drop heavily or suddenly: Dump the topsoil here.
  • earp — Wyatt (Ber·ry Stapp) [wahy-uh t-ber-ee-stap] /ˈwaɪ ətˈbɛr i stæp/ (Show IPA), 1848–1929, U.S. frontiersman, law officer, and gunfighter.
  • ecsp — An extension to CSP, supporting dynamic communication channels and nested processes.
  • eirp — equivalent isotropically radiated power
  • ercp — endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography
  • esop — Employee Stock Ownership Plan: a compensation plan set up by a company and funded with its tax-deductible contributions by which qualified employees accumulate shares of the company's stock
  • excp — Execute Channel Program
  • fcap — foolscap
  • feep — /feep/ 1. The soft electronic "bell" sound of a display terminal (except for a VT-52); a beep (in fact, the microcomputer world seems to prefer beep). 2. To cause the display to make a feep sound. ASR-33s (the original TTYs) do not feep; they have mechanical bells that ring. Alternate forms: beep, "bleep", or just about anything suitably onomatopoeic. (Jeff MacNelly, in his comic strip "Shoe", uses the word "eep" for sounds made by computer terminals and video games; this is perhaps the closest written approximation yet.) The term "breedle" was sometimes heard at SAIL, where the terminal bleepers are not particularly soft (they sound more like the musical equivalent of a raspberry or Bronx cheer; for a close approximation, imagine the sound of a Star Trek communicator's beep lasting for five seconds). The "feeper" on a VT-52 has been compared to the sound of a '52 Chevy stripping its gears. See also ding.
  • flap — to swing or sway back and forth loosely, especially with noise: A loose shutter flapped outside the window.
  • flip — to toss or put in motion with a sudden impulse, as with a snap of a finger and thumb, especially so as to cause to turn over in the air: to flip a coin.
  • flop — to fall or plump down suddenly, especially with noise; drop or turn with a sudden bump or thud (sometimes followed by down): The puppy flopped down on the couch.
  • foip — Fax over IP
  • foop — OBJ2 plus object-orientation. "Extensions and Foundations for Object-Oriented Programming", J. Goguen et al, in Research Directions in Object-Oriented Programming, B. Shriver et al eds, MIT Press 1987.
  • frap — to bind or wrap tightly with ropes or chains.
  • frcp — Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians
  • fttp — Do you mean FTP or HTTP?
  • gaap — In the US, GAAP are rules to which financial statements of publicly traded companies must conform.
  • galp — Lb archaic to gape; yawn.
  • gamp — an umbrella.
  • garp — A graphical language for concurrent programming.
  • gasp — a sudden, short intake of breath, as in shock or surprise.
  • gaup — to stare with the mouth open in wonder or astonishment; gape: Crowds stood gawping at the disabled ship.
  • gawp — to stare with the mouth open in wonder or astonishment; gape: Crowds stood gawping at the disabled ship.
  • geep — the hybrid offspring of a goat and a sheep.
  • gimp — a limp.
  • glip — (military, transitive) To bomb a bridge, particularly with a technique developed by the 490th Missile Squadron during World War II.
  • glop — unappetizing food, especially of a semiliquid consistency.
  • gmap — GCOS Macro Assembler Program
  • golp — a roundel purpure.
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