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noun

sap

sap
noun
1
The watery fluid that circulates through a plant, carrying nutrients.
"Maple sap is boiled down for hours to make syrup."
"The tree oozed sticky sap where the branch had broken off."
2
A gullible or easily fooled person.
"Don't be such a sap — that deal is obviously a scam."
3
A small, weighted club, often leather-covered, used as a hand weapon.
"The security guard carried a sap tucked into his belt."
verb
1
To gradually drain someone's strength, energy, or resolve.
"The long commute sapped her energy before the workday even began."
"Years of overwork had sapped his enthusiasm for the job."

How to Use Sap

Learner’s notes

In plain EnglishMost often the liquid inside a plant, or (as a verb) to slowly wear something down.

Common mistake

As a noun for "a foolish person," it's old-fashioned slang — mostly heard in vintage films and books rather than everyday speech.

Common pairings
sap someone's strength maple sap what a sap

Word Forms

sapped past tense, sapped past tense, sapped past tense, saps plural, saps plural, saps plural, saps singular, saps singular, saps singular

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Fill the Gap

Can you complete this real example?

Maple _____ is boiled down for hours to make syrup.

Etymology

From Old English "saep" ("juice, sap"), from a Proto-Germanic root related to taste; the "gullible person" sense comes from "sapskull," literally someone with sap instead of brains.

Definitions: FreeDict original editorial