topper
See also: Topper
English
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ˈtɒpə/
- (General American) IPA(key): /ˈtɑpɚ/
- (General Australian) IPA(key): /ˈtɔpə/
Audio (AU) (file) - Rhymes: -ɒpə(ɹ)
- Hyphenation: top‧per
Noun
topper (plural toppers)
- Something that is on top.
- 1947 September 6, “Paul Baron Nixes 2 Morgan Albums”, in Joseph G. Csida, editor, The Billboard: The World’s Foremost Amusement Weekly, volume 59, number 35, Cincinnati, Oh.: Roger S. Littleford Jr.; William D. Littleford, →OCLC, page 14, column 3:
- Deal for network star Henry Morgan to sign a Majestic contract for two albums has fallen thru, with Paul Baron, newly-named artist and repertoire topper at the diskery, kiboshing a deal that virtually had been consummated between his predecessors and Music Corporation of America (MCA).
- 1999, John Yeoman, Self Reliance: A Recipe for the New Millennium, page 55:
- Chicken livers, of course, can also be gently fried, mashed in butter, and spread as a toast topper.
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- A top hat.
- 1980, Bill Oddie, Bill Oddie's Little Black Bird Book, page 61:
- This is another area in which it's hard to tell the dude from the twitcher, as ratting caps and deerstalkers, flying helmets and even toppers are considered acceptably eccentric.
- Something that exceeds those previous in a series, as a joke or prank.
- (chiefly US) A short outer jacket worn by women or children.
- a. 1969, John Kennedy Toole, A Confederacy of Dunces, Penguin, published 1981, →ISBN:
- She was wearing her short pink topper and the small red hat that tilted over one eye so that she looked like a refugee starlet from the Gold Diggers film series.
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- A soft, relatively thin, piece of padding placed on top of a mattress, or forming the upper layer of a mattress.
- (India) The student who achieves the highest score in an examination.
- (colloquial) The head or chief of an organization.
- 1953, August 29, Billboard (page 4)
- Cooley currently is ironing out details of the proposed kinescoping with Klaus Landsberg, topper at KTLA, over whose facilities the hour-long show has been telecast […]
- 1953, August 29, Billboard (page 4)
- A person or tool that cuts off the top of something.
- 1980, Barry Targan, Kingdoms, page 24:
- At first, in the pines, he had worked as a topper in his strong and boldest days, walking up the trees two hundred feet […]
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- One who tops steel ingots.
- A single-handed dinghy, 11 foot (3.6 metres) in length, with only one sail.
- A three-square float, or file, used by comb-makers.
- (dated, slang) Tobacco left in the bottom of a pipe bowl; so called from being often taken out and placed on top of the newly filled bowl.
- 1875, E. R. Billings, Tobacco (page 189)
- One man was faithful to his pipe, and kept / Despair and deeper misery at bay, / By seeking ever for a "topper," dropped / From some spurned pipe, but that he could not find; […]
- 1875, E. R. Billings, Tobacco (page 189)
- (dated, slang) A fine or remarkable thing or person.
- (dated, slang) A blow on the head.
- A small secondary comic strip seen along with a larger Sunday strip, and usually by the same author.
- (Ireland) A pencil sharpener.
Derived terms
Related terms
Further reading
topper (dinghy) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
Dutch
_-_Aythya_marila_(269pl).jpg.webp)
Aythya marila (male) in Nederlandsche vogelen, 1770-1829
Etymology
The bird name is generally taken to derive from the noun top ("top"), not the adjective top ("great, amazing"). Some have instead adduced the dialectal word dobber (referring to both the greater scaup and the tufted duck), which was apparently current in Zeeuws-Vlaanderen at some point, with devoicing of both d- (to t-) and -bb- (to -pp-) yielding this form.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈtɔ.pər/
Audio (file) - Hyphenation: top‧per
- Rhymes: -ɔpər
Noun
topper m (plural toppers)
- Someone or something excellent; a belter, a ripper.
- The greater scaup, Aythya marila
- Synonym: toppereend
Derived terms
Further reading
topper (vogel) on the Dutch Wikipedia.Wikipedia nl
Latin
Adverb
topper (not comparable)
- with all diligence, speedily, forthwith
References
- “topper”, in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
- topper in Gaffiot, Félix (1934) Dictionnaire illustré latin-français, Hachette
Norwegian Bokmål
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