cope
21cope — (v.) late 14c., come to blows with, from O.Fr. couper, earlier colper hit, punch, from colp a blow (see COUP (Cf. coup)). Meaning evolved 17c. into handle successfully, perhaps influenced by obsolete cope to traffic (15c. 17c.), a word in North… …
22cope — Ⅰ. cope [1] ► VERB ▪ deal effectively with something difficult. DERIVATIVES coper noun. ORIGIN originally in the sense «meet in battle, come to blows»: from Old French coper, from Greek kolaphos a blow with the fist . Ⅱ. cope …
23Cope — (spr. kohp), Charles West, engl. Maler, geb. 28. Juli 1811 in Leeds, malte Stoffe aus der engl. Geschichte und Dichtung, sowie 1845 66 Freskobilder im Parlamentsgebäude; gest. 21. Aug. 1890 in Bournemouth. »Reminiscences« hg. von seinem Sohne… …
24Cope [2] — Cope (spr. kohp), Edward Drinker, nordamerik. Paläontolog, geb. 28. Juli 1840 in Philadelphia, Prof. der Zoologie zu Philadelphia, gest. das. 12. April 1897, bes. wichtig seine Forschungen über fossile Wirbeltiere, schrieb: »Synopsis of the… …
25copé — s. m. [Brasil] Choupana; palhoça …
26cope — [v] manage, contend battle with, buffet, carry on, confront, deal, dispatch, encounter, endure, face, get a handle on*, get by, grapple, hack*, hack it*, handle, hold one’s own*, live with, make go of it*, make it*, make out*, make the grade*,… …
27COPE — sustantivo femenino 1. Área: radio Sigla de Cadena de Ondas Populares Españolas , emisora de radio, España …
28cope — sustantivo masculino 1. Uso/registro: jergal. Origen: Argentina. Entusiasmo exagerado por alguna cosa …
29cope — (De copo2). m. Parte más espesa de la red de pescar …
30copé — m. Especie de nafta o betún natural de algunas regiones americanas, que se mezclaba con alquitrán …