chop
 oxford
 views  updated May 29 2018chop  / chäp/ •
v. (chopped, chop·ping) [tr.] cut (something) into small pieces with repeated sharp blows using an ax or knife. ∎  (chop something off) remove by cutting: they chopped off all her hair. ∎  cut through the base of (something, esp. a tree) with blows from an ax or similar implement, in order to fell it: the boy chopped down eight trees | [intr.] the men were chopping at the undergrowth with machetes.  ∎  strike (a ball) with a short heavy blow, as if cutting at something. ∎  (usu. be chopped) abolish or reduce the size or extent of (something) in a way regarded as brutally sudden: their training courses are to be chopped.•
n. 1. a downward cutting blow or movement, typically with the hand.2. a thick slice of meat, esp. pork or lamb, adjacent to, and typically including, a rib.3. crushed or ground grain used as animal feed.4. [in  sing.] the broken motion of water, typically due to the action of the wind against the tide: we started our run into a two-foot chop.
 The Oxford Pocket Dictionary of Current English 
   chop
 oxford
 views  updated May 18 2018chop1 not much chop no good; not up to much. The sense of 
chop here originated in the 
Hindi word 
chāp (in English since the early 17th century) meaning ‘official stamp’. As used by Europeans in the Far East, the word was extended to cover documents such as passports to which an official stamp or impression was attached and in 
China to mean ‘branded goods’. From this the sense developed in the late 19th century to mean something that has ‘class’ or has been validated as genuine or good.
  The Oxford Dictionary of Phrase and Fable ELIZABETH KNOWLES
   chop
 oxford
 views  updated May 23 2018chop 3 (usu. pl.) jaws xv; opening, entrance (as in 
Chops of the Channel the entrance into the 
English Channel from the Atlantic) XVII. var. of 
CHAP 2.
  The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Etymology T. F. HOAD
   chop
 oxford
 views  updated May 23 2018chop 2 barter, exchange XIV; phr. 
chop and change bargain (XV), make frequent changes (XVI); hence, change as the wind, veer XVII. perh. var. of ME. 
chappe, which appears to have been evolved from OE. 
ċēapian with infl. from 
CHAPMAN.
  The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Etymology T. F. HOAD
   chop
 oxford
 views  updated May 23 2018chop2 chop logic argue in a tiresomely pedantic way; quibble (from a dialect use of 
chop ‘cut’ meaning ‘bandy words’). Compare 
logic chopping.
  The Oxford Dictionary of Phrase and Fable ELIZABETH KNOWLES
   chop
 oxford
 views  updated May 21 2018chop 1 cut, hew. XVI. var. of 
chap vb. (see 
CHAP 1).
 Hence 
chop sb. cutting blow XIV; slice of meat with bone XV.
  The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Etymology T. F. HOAD
   chop
 oxford
 views  updated Jun 08 2018chop3 chop and change change one's tactics, vacillate, be inconstant; an alliterative phrase in which 
chop has lost its original meaning of ‘barter’ and is now taken as ‘change, alter’.
  The Oxford Dictionary of Phrase and Fable ELIZABETH KNOWLES
   chop
 oxford
 views  updated May 14 2018chop A slice of meat containing a part of the bone; commonly the rib, but also cut from the chump or tail end of the loin (chump chops) or neck (then called cutlets).
  A Dictionary of Food and Nutrition DAVID A. BENDER