Noun Tobacco is their main crop. They sprayed the crops with a pesticide. The teachers got ready for a new crop of students. a new crop of horror movies Verb The picture was cropped badly. We had to crop the image to fit it into the frame. Her hair was cropped short. See More
Recent Examples on the Web
Noun
California’s recreational cannabis program was created, in part, to curb the black market and weaken drug cartels’ stranglehold on the crop. Mitch Koss, NBC News, 8 Sep. 2022 Likely not, and VW is arguably making a canny bet that our market wants not another minivan benchmarked to the strengths of the existing crop but a machine that goes in a completely different direction. Ezra Dyer, Car and Driver, 6 Sep. 2022 Organic mulches gradually decompose and can be tilled in with the soil before the next crop. Tom Maccubbin, Orlando Sentinel, 3 Sep. 2022 Mesa, who now lives between Los Angeles and Spain, draws from her own experience living in such a rural town where tobacco was the predominant crop. Anna Marie De La Fuente, Variety, 1 Sep. 2022 Good output would help India maintain its preeminent position in the global rice market, but a prolonged spell of lower or uneven rains could hit the crop. Reuters, CNN, 1 Sep. 2022 The researchers also note that breadfruit cultivation could expand to new areas, such as sub-Saharan Africa, where the crop hasn’t yet been grown broadly. Sarah Kuta, Smithsonian Magazine, 30 Aug. 2022 An in-depth view of the euphoria-inducing plant khat, the lives of those who harvest the crop in Harar, Ethiopia, and the people who are addicted to it. Olivia Mccormack, Washington Post, 29 Aug. 2022 Perhaps Netflix could nix a few of the current overabundant crop of gimmicky reality shows to make room in the budget for singular visions like The Sandman. Jennifer Ouellette, Ars Technica, 29 Aug. 2022
Verb
The photos will crop and focus on the people in them. Adrienne So, WIRED, 5 Sep. 2022 Among 282 patients — the vast majority of them children under the age of 15 — unvaccinated individuals were twice as likely to have large numbers of lesions crop up, and three times as likely to have multiple lesions in the genital area. Andrew Joseph, STAT, 1 Sep. 2022 Yet for the most part, all the nuisances of biking still crop up: hot or cold or wet weather, needing to transport something heavy or awkward, taking on another errand during the day that requires a drive, and so forth. Ian Bogost, The Atlantic, 31 Aug. 2022 The only way to refine an image DALL-E produces currently is to rewrite the prompt or crop the image and use it as the prompt for a new set of ideas.Wired, 14 July 2022 The system is able to recognise people, animals and vehicles, crop into and track them as the video plays out. Andrew Williams, Forbes, 6 July 2022 Davis also expects to see confidential-care lines — much like whistle-blower lines — and coordination centers to soon crop up and provide third-party services to companies. Arianne Cohen, BostonGlobe.com, 5 July 2022 By the 9th, promising options crop up and with Venus beautifully aspected at the top of your solar chart, your talents are on display and so is your charm. Katharine Merlin, Town & Country, 1 July 2022 The monitor's software includes the ability to crop your image and adjust brightness and exposure levels via sliders. Scharon Harding, Ars Technica, 12 May 2022 See More
Word History
Etymology
Noun
(senses 1-3) Middle English crop, crope, croppe "crop of a bird, portion of an herb above the root, sprig, bud, crown of a tree, harvest of a plant, tip or top of something," going back to Old English crop "crop of a bird, sprout, shoot, bunch or cluster (of fruit, seeds), umbel (also croppa, weak noun, only in sense "bunch, cluster"), going back to Germanic *kruppa- "something rounded, bulge," (whence also Old Saxon kripp "crop of a bird," Middle Dutch crop "gnarl, goiter, gullet, body, corpse, blister, bud," Old High German kropf "protuberance, goiter, crop of a bird," Old Icelandic kroppr "swelling on the body, crop of a bird" [Icelandic & Faroese kroppur "body"]), of expressive origin; (sense 4) derivatives of crop entry 2
Note: The Old English n-stem croppa is matched by Old High German kropfo "crop of a bird, bulbous onion." Old Icelandic krov "slaughtered animal with the entrails removed" points to an original paradigm *kruƀan- : *kruƀn-, with the latter resulting in *kruppa- by loss of the nasal, devoicing, and gemination (Kluge's Law). The early meaning of the etymon and its later semantic bifurcations are difficult to reconstruct with certainty. An original sense "something rounded, bulge, swelling" may have led, on the one hand, to "cavity in a slaughtered animal after the entrails are removed" and hence "body, corpse" (meanings in North Germanic and Middle Dutch), and on the other to "swelling in the throat, crop of a bird, goiter." The sense "sprout, bud" in West Germanic is a further specification of "swelling." The later development in English is not paralleled in the other languages. The sense "sprout, sprig" seems to have been generalized to "structures terminating a plant, as fruit, seeds, umbels" and then, on the one hand, to "upper part, tip or end of an object" (such as the stock of a whip) and, on the other hand, to "harvested fruit of a plant, yield of such harvested products in a season." Compare croup entry 1, group entry 1. See R. Lühr, Expressivität und Lautgesetz im Germanischen, Heidelberg, 1988, p. 235; R. Lühr et al., Etymologisches Wörterbuch des Althochdeutschen, Band 5 [2014], columns 816-18; G. Kroonen, Etymological Dictionary of Proto-Germanic, Brill, 2013, p. 307.
Verb
Middle English croppen "to prune, trim, cut branches from (a bush or tree), derivative of crop, crope, croppe "sprig, bud, crown of a tree, tip or top of something" — more at crop entry 1
Note: The phrasal verb crop up is dependent on a geological sense of crop, "(of rock strata) to appear at the surface," a coal miners' term in the West Midlands in the seventeenth century, which is apparently a development of the noun sense "tip, end" ("to show itself at the exposed end"). Compare outcrop entry 1.
First Known Use
Noun
before the 12th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1