cop on
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English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]- cop-on (noun only)
Pronunciation
[edit]- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /kɒp ɒn/
Audio (General Australian): (file)
Noun
[edit]- (Ireland, informal, idiomatic) Common sense.
- That eejit has no cop on.
- 2008, Joseph Dolan, "Hazards caused by pedestrians" (letter to the editor), Irish Independent, 22 November 2008:
- While she is right that some cyclists do cycle in a dangerous manner, pedestrians need to have some "cop on" as well.
- 2011 May 11, “Broadside at Croke Park”, in The Meath Chronicle:
- Fixtures' secretary Jimmy Henry refuted the comments. "I wouldn't have got this job if I hadn't some cop on," he said.
- 2012 March 29, Martina Nee, “Student with no ‘cop on’ fined for using his scientific brilliance for cannabis growing”, in Galway Advertiser:
- Molloy’s solicitor said that there was a[sic] element of naivety here in that his client, who is “quite brilliant” in his studies in physics, has “no cop on” and took a “scientist’s approach” to growing cannabis.
Verb
[edit]cop on (third-person singular simple present cops on, present participle copping on, simple past and past participle copped on)
- (Ireland, informal, idiomatic) To stop behaving immaturely; behave, grow up.
- You'll get in trouble with the boss if you don't cop on.
- 2006, Johnny Fallon, Party Time: Growing Up in Politics, Mercier Press, published 2006, →ISBN, page 110:
- Drink, drink and more drink. Ulster Bank, College Green, was filled with sore heads for the entire month of the world cup. I knew it was time to start copping on when my housemate, O'Dea, who was a much harder drinker than I ever was, said to me, 'Jaysus, I was fierce worried about you during the World Cup, you were on the lash every fuckin' night, fallin' home in some state.'
- 2011 October 23, Daniel McConnell, “Tough rehab, yes -- but mind you don't end up killing the patient”, in Irish Independent:
- The inference was clear. You Irish were all very naughty and it's time you copped on and grew up.
- 2024 March 16, Antonia Cundy, “The Opus Dei diaries”, in FT Weekend, page 18:
- “Cop on, Anne Marie,” her parents said. “Time to be normal now.”
- (Ireland, informal, UK, dialect) To come to understand; twig, cotton on.
Translations
[edit]to behave, grow up
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