popple
Pronunciation
  • IPA: /ˈpɒpl̩/
Noun

popple (plural popples)

  1. (dialect) poplar
    • 1911, Highways and byways of the Great Lakes, The Macmillan company, page 264
      Some of them had recently built a pulp mill, and he called my attention to the young growths of "popple" we could see from the car window and remarked: "There's good pulp material in those trees, but it's not easy to get 'em cut. You'll strike lots of Catholic lumber-jacks who won't have anything to do with cutting a popple tree, and they won't cross a bridge or sleep in a house that has popple wood in it. There's a tradition that the cross on which Christ was crucified was of popple, and they say the wood was cursed on that account.
Noun

popple (plural popples)

  1. Choppy water; the motion or sound of agitated water (as from boiling or wind).
Verb

popple (popples, present participle poppling; past and past participle poppled)

  1. Of water, to move in a choppy, bubbling, or tossing manner.
  2. To move quickly up and down; to bob up and down, like a cork on rough water.



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