Bap
intj, name, noun, verb, slang ·Moderate ·High school level
Definitions
- 1 A soft bread roll, originally from Scotland.
"burger bap"
- 2 Cooked rice as part of Korean cuisine. uncountable
- 3 Acronym of Black American princess, an upper-class black woman with a spoiled or materialistic attitude. US, abbreviation, acronym, alt-of, derogatory, sometimes
"[Condoleezza Rice is] a BAP—a bona fide Black American Princess—who exhibits all the telltale qualities of the category: a razor-sharp proficiency, cool manner and a good daughter's devotion to carrying out orders."
- 4 a small loaf or roll of soft bread wordnet
- 5 A woman's breast. British, Ireland, in-plural, slang
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- 6 The ship prefix for a ship from the navy of Peru. initialism
- 7 The head. Ireland, slang
"He lost the bap."
- 1 To hit lightly. informal, transitive
"“Actually, I like you growling when we're in our bedchamber. It, um . . . makes me think of all the things we do.” “Oh.” He processed that for a moment, then grinned down at her. “I'll take that as permission to growl at you all the more, then!” “Wolfer!” She bapped him again with the back of her fingers."
- 1 The sound of a light blow or slap. informal
"Damian rolls Mr. McNutt over and beats the tar out of him with a series of punches, glasses on or not. BAP! BAP! SMACK! BAP! BAP! "You and your men are going to get my family killed!" hollers Damian."
- 1 Initialism of Bronze Age Pervert, a far-right Internet personality. abbreviation, alt-of, initialism
"In a speech earlier this year, Peter Thiel said that while he found BAP’s solutions to modern problems “tempting,” he disagreed with his “distortions to the Judeo-Christian tradition.”"
Synonyms
All synonymsExample
More examples"Mrs Dudley came bouncing back, hand swinging, big stain on her right bap like she'd been shot or Da had got at her in an alleyway."
Etymology
Originally Scottish English, of unknown origin.
Onomatopoeic.
Borrowed from Korean 밥 (bap).
Related phrases
More for "bap"
Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.