fop in English

noun
1
a man who is concerned with his clothes and appearance in an affected and excessive way; a dandy.
The fops and dandies had no interest in war and concentrated instead on their seraglios.
synonyms:dandyman about townposeursnappy dressertrendoidhipstercoxcombpopinjay

Use "fop" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "fop" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "fop", or refer to the context using the word "fop" in the English Dictionary.

1. Let the looped Bavaroy the fop embrace.

2. Sadly, the FOP project remains starved of resources.

3. FOP allows both of them to be embedded.

4. A young fop minced up to George and introduced himself.

5. Getting and installing FOP is as simple as downloading and unpacking the binary version (see Resources). FOP is then ready to run from the downloaded location.

6. About 600 people throughout the world suffer from the incurable FOP.

7. That young fop ... Perhaps it had been the Prince or Gaveston?

8. This isn't even pop about pop, this is fop about pop.

9. Figure 1 illustrates the general flow for generating PDF documentation using open source FOP.

10. Then use the FOP command in Listing 2 to generate the font matrix file.

11. 8 synonyms for Clotheshorse: fashion plate, fop, gallant, dandy, dude, beau, sheik, swell

12. To investigate CT features and value of diagnosis of focal organizing pneumonia ( FOP ).

13. The most contemptible of the personages in the play is the courtly fop Osric.

14. Howitt's eyes.’ ‘He is a silly and superficial man, a fop or Coxcomb.’

15. Who was the young page, and the mysterious young fop who had trailed them?

16. 21 The most contemptible of the personages in the play is the courtly fop Osric.

17. FOP is the world's first print formatter driven by XSL Formatting Objects (XSL-FO).

18. FOP had delivered goods to Herlitz PBS AG but received no payment, which threatened its liquidity.

19. Blocadas em parafina, com diagnóstico histo-patológico de FOP e de LCGP

20. The easy adaptability and expansion options through the flexible interface programming FOP is a plus for ABAS.

21. It is a good idea to register the embedded font with FOP when you initialize the application.

22. See the FOP documentation (see Resources) for further possibilities including borders, margins, padding, color, images, and tables.

23. The wrapper script then uses the fop application to generate the target output format from that file.

24. Those files are used by FOP to render text in fonts other than the ones listed above.

25. (The White Company, by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle) “I think it is the letter of a fop,” said my father, Bluntly

26. However, the current FOP does not support the font-family list; it only uses the first font in the list, if that exists.

27. The bored wives of old men and burgesses often found happiness in the arms of some court dandy or noble fop.

28. In the high-angle group, the FOP deviated away from the NOA severely. The vertical dentoalveolar heights of U6 were normal.

29. It is also possible to delegate to FOP the transformation task from the original XML, being necessary to inform the XML file name and the stylesheet (lines 4 and 5 at Listing .

30. To create a PDF file using FOP, just inform the file name that is in conformity with XSL-FO recommendation and the output file name (lines 1 and 2 at Listing .

31. Coxcomb (n.) "a vain, shallow fellow, a fop," 1570s, from cokkes comb (1560s, see cockscomb), the name of a device worn in the cap by licensed fools.Johnson has coxcomical (adj.) "foppish, conceited," but discourages it as "a low word unworthy of use."

32. One of Cowper's attractive occasional poems, 'To a Young Lady, with a Present of Two Cockscombs ', puns on cockscomb = (a) an ornamental plant of the genus celosia, (b) a fop: Cowper's 'To a Young Lady with a Present of Two Cockscombs' and Gentleman's Magazine

33. (Can we find and add a quotation of Johnson to this entry?) [1716], [John] Gay, “(please specify the page number(s))”, in Trivia: Or, The Art of Walking the Streets of London, London: Printed for Bernard Lintott, […], OCLC 13598122: Let the looped Bavaroy the fop embrace

34. Beau (n.) "attendant suitor of a lady," 1720, from French Beau "the Beautiful," noun use of an adjective, from Old French bel "Beautiful, handsome, fair, genuine, real" (11c.), from Latin bellus "handsome, fine, pretty, agreeable" (see belle).Meaning "man who attends excessively to dress, etiquette, etc.; a fop; a dandy" is from 1680s, short for French Beau garçon "pretty boy" (1660s).