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Synonyms

bloop

American  
[bloop] / blup /

noun

  1. a clumsy mistake.

    The directions look easy, but I still made one bloop after another.

  2. a howling sound or high-pitched hum, especially a signal of interference generated through a radio set.

  3. Baseball. blooper (often used attributively).

    That was a perfect bloop single—hit right “where they ain’t!”


verb (used with object)

  1. to ruin; botch.

    They blooped another sales opportunity by pretending to know more about the product than they actually do.

  2. to make (a howling sound or high-pitched hum), especially as generated through a radio set.

    The noises they blooped over the radio were some seriously creepy signals.

  3. Baseball. to hit a blooper.

    He blooped that one into shallow right for a base hit.

Etymology

Origin of bloop

First recorded in 1925–30; originally in reference to a high-pitched sound produced by interference in a radio signal; of expressive origin

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Half a dozen bands had already rushed to market with recordings of it: Bloop, bleep, bloop, bleep, bloop, bleep, The faucet keeps a-dripping and I can't sleep.

From Time Magazine Archive

Seeping in from the West Coast, a jangling jingle known as Bloop, Bleep* the song of the leaky faucet, was beginning to inundate the nation.

From Time Magazine Archive

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