different between doper vs oper

doper

English

Etymology

dope +? -er

Noun

doper (plural dopers)

  1. (derogatory) One who uses performance enhancing substances for competitive gain, especially illegally.
    • 2003: Sam "I can't even explain what I'm feeling right now," says CLark in rec.skiing.snowboard
      Would you care to point to some proof other than the Canuck's positive back in Nagano? If you are using that as a basis then all sports would be riddled with "dopers" especially XC skiing.
    • 2006: Matt Seaton, Tour de farce, Guardian Unlimited
      ...the testers are always in a race with the dopers and usually playing catch-up.
  2. (derogatory) One who frequently uses recreational drugs; a druggie; a stoner.
    • 2003: Lt. John Hadily, ICE DESTROYS LIVES-TPD DOPERS IN DENIAL in talk.politics.drugs
      I will keep posting the fact that if you possess drugs where I am employed and you are caught I'll throw your sorry ass in a cage where the dopers belong.
    • 2006: Gene Seymour, Clerks II, Newsday
      With the Kwik-Mart leveled by fire, Dante and Randal's professional aspirations take a southerly route to a Mooby's fast-food restaurant where dopey dopers Jay (Jason Mewes) and Silent Bob (Smith) have followed with their boombox and illicit activities.
    • 2006:, Anthony Cormier, Father: 'We're here to find her body', HeradTribune.com
      Tamara Toy was a blue-eyed daughter of a preacher, growing up good and God-fearing but eventually getting lost along the way, falling in with dopers and felons and a petty crook who stole her heart.
  3. (obsolete) A person employed to apply dope solution during aircraft manufacture.

Adjective

doper

  1. comparative form of dope: more dope

Anagrams

  • Pedro, orped, pored, repod, roped

Dutch

Etymology

From Middle Dutch dôpere, from Old Dutch d?peri. Equivalent to dopen +? -er.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?do?.p?r/
  • Hyphenation: do?per
  • Rhymes: -o?p?r

Noun

doper m (plural dopers)

  1. baptiser, one who baptises
  2. (historical) Anabaptist [from 16th c.]
    Synonyms: anabaptist, doperse, herdoper, wederdoper

Hyponyms

  • doopsgezinde
  • menist

Derived terms

  • dopers

French

Etymology

From English dope.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /d?.pe/

Verb

doper

  1. to dope; to do doping
  2. to boost (one's performance by doping)

Conjugation

Derived terms

  • dopage

Further reading

  • “doper” in Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).

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oper

English

Etymology

Short for operator.

Noun

oper (plural opers)

  1. (Internet) A network operator on IRC.
    • 2000, Howard Rheingold, The virtual community: homesteading on the electronic frontier (issue 28, page 187)
      Chanops can kick people off a channel; opers can ban people logging in from specific Internet sites from participating in IRC.

Synonyms

  • IRCop

Related terms

  • chanop
  • op
  • deop
  • reop

Anagrams

  • Pero, pore, reop, repo, rope

Czech

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [?op?r]

Noun

oper

  1. genitive plural of opera

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