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coper
(redirected from horse-coper)

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cope 1  (kp)
intr.v. coped, cop·ing, copes
1. To contend or strive, especially on even terms or with success: coping with child rearing and a full-time job.
2. To contend with difficulties and act to overcome them: "Facing unprecedented problems, the Federal Reserve of the early 1930s couldn't cope" (Robert J. Samuelson).

[Middle English copen, coupen, to strike, from Old French couper, from Vulgar Latin *colpre, from Late Latin colpus, blow; see coup.]

coper n.

cope 2  (kp)
n.
1. A long ecclesiastical vestment worn over an alb or surplice.
2. A covering resembling a cloak or mantle.
3. A coping.
tr.v. coped, cop·ing, copes
1. To cover or dress in a cope.
2. To provide with coping: cope a wall.

[Middle English cope, from Old English -cp, from Medieval Latin cpa, cloak, from Late Latin cappa.]

coper [ˈkəʊpə]
n
(Business / Commerce) a horse-dealer
[C17 (a dealer, chapman): from dialect cope to buy, barter, from Low German; related to Dutch koopen to buy]


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