HomeServicesBlogDictionariesContactSpanish Course
← Back to search

Meaning of nope | Babel Free

Noun CEFR B1 Frequent
nəʊp

Definitions

  1. A negative reply, no
  2. Martha's Vineyard
    archaic
  3. A negative reply, no.
    informal
  4. A bullfinch.
    archaic
  5. A blow to the head.
    East-Midlands, Northern-England
  6. Informal. Not so:nay, no, nix.
  7. An intensely undesirable thing, such as a circumstance or an animal, eliciting immediate repulsion without possibility of further consideration
  8. An intensely undesirable thing, such as a circumstance or an animal, eliciting immediate repulsion without possibility of further consideration.
    slang
  9. an informal word for no1
  10. A bullfinch
  11. adv (inf) → ne(e) (dial), → nein
    adv (inf)
  12. A blow to the head
  13. To hit someone on the head

Equivalents

العربية لا
Bosanski no
Deutsch nee NO
Español nel nelson no po nop
فارسی نه
Suomi ei
Français Bah NaN nope nope nope
हिन्दी नहीं
Hrvatski no
Bahasa Indonesia enggak
Íslenska neibb
Italiano no
日本語 いや ううん 違う
한국어 아니
Kurdî bah nan nan nêl nêl nêl nem nem no no
Nederlands neu
Português nem
Română nu
Русский не-а
Српски no
Türkçe hayır yo

Examples

“I'll take that as a nope, then.”
“By one reporter's count, questions about the change elicited seven shakes of the head indicating no comment, five "yeps" and three "nopes" from Earnhardt.”
“This cemetery with a haunted playground is a casket full of nope.”
“1613, Michael Drayton, Poly-Olbion, read in The Complete Works of Michael Drayton, Now First Collected. With Introductions and Notes by Richard Hooper. Volume 2. Poly-olbion Elibron Classics (2005) [facsimile of John Russell Smith (1876 ed)], p. 146, To Philomell the next, the Linnet we prefer;/And by that warbling bird, the Wood-Lark place we then, /The Reed-sparrow, the Nope, the Red-breast, and the Wren, /The Yellow-pate: which though she hurt the blooming tree, /Yet scarce hath any bird a finer pipe than she.”
“I may note that olp, if pronounced ope, as it sometimes is, may be the origin of nope; an ope, and a nope, differ as little as possible.”
“In Natural History, 'An Eye of Pheasants' was also 'A Nye of Pheasants', and even the human Eye was written a Nye. The Bulfinch was either a Nope, or an Ope ; the common Lizard, or Eft (Old English Evet) is also the Newt; the Water-Eft is the Water-Newt ; and the Saxon nedder, a serpent (probably allied to Nether, as crawling on the ground) has been transformed into an Adder.”
“Nope, an old name for the bullfinch used by Drayton (Wright), is a corrupt form for an ope, otherwise spelt aupe, olp, or alpe (Prompt.Parv.).”
“(in an example of use of crackmans) The cull thought to have loped by breaking through the crackmans, but we fetched him back by a nope on the costard, which stopped his jaw.”
“I'll fetch thee a nope.”
“The principal island, Martha's Vineyard...Its usual Indian name was Capawock, though sometimes called Nope. (It is believed that Nope was more properly the name of Gay Head.) The greatest part of the island is low and level land.”
“Miohqsoo, or Myoxeo, was another noted Indian of Nope. He was a convert of Hiacoomes, whom he had sent for to inquire of him about his God.”
“1853, Sarah Sprague Jacobs, Nonantum and Natick, Massachusetts Sabbath School Society, p. 189, R. Gookin calls it Nope; other writers call it Capawack. It is the island known to us as Martha's Vineyard...As Mr Eliot's first convert, Waban, was, through life, a sober, upright man, so Hiacoomes, the first Christian Indian of Nope, always preserved an unspotted reputation.”
“A catechism in the dialect of the Indians of Nope or Martha's Vineyard.”
“1895, Boston Colonial Society of Massachusetts, Transactions, Colonial Society of Massachusetts, p. 187, Their story, as written by Daniel Gookin in 1674, is worth repeating: At the island of Nope, or Martha's Vineyard, about the year 1649, one of the first ...”

CEFR level

B1
Intermediate
This word is part of the CEFR B1 vocabulary — intermediate level.
See all B1 English words →

See also

Learn this word in context

See nope used in real conversations inside our free language course.

Start Free Course

Know this word better than we do? Language is a living thing — help us keep it growing. Collaborate with Babel Free