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  2. dope (n.)1807, American English, "sauce, gravy; any thick liquid," from Dutch doop "thick dipping sauce," from doopen "to dip" (see dip (v.)). Used generally by late 19c. for any mixture or preparation of unknown ingredients. Extension to "narcotic drug" is by 1889, from practice of smoking semi-liquid opium preparation.

    • Dopey

      Sense of "inside information" (1901) may come from knowing...

  3. Jan 5, 2016 · Etymonline.com, which draws from various sources, says the use of dope to mean drugs came about separately from the use of the word dope to mean a stupid person. It all comes from doop, a Dutch word for a thick sauce.

  4. Sep 11, 2018 · Dope comes from the Dutch doop, meaning “thick sauce” and used for various types of gravy in English in the early 1800s. By the 1850s, dope was a mild insult for a “stupid person” … even Disney’s 1937 Snow White and the Seven Dwarves featured Dopey. Pinterest. You know what else is thick and sticky? Opium, referred to as dope by the 1880s.

    • Academic Dope
    • Legalizing Dope
    • America’s Dope-Dealing History

    For my Ph.D. dissertation in Rhetorics, Communications, and Information Design, I wrote a rap albumtitled “Owning My Masters: The Rhetorics of Rhymes & Revolutions.” A peer-reviewed, mastered version of the album is due out this summer from University of Michigan Press. Sleepwalking, Vol. 1: A Mixtape by A.D. Carson Part of my reasoning for writing...

    Though I earned a Ph.D by rapping, my own relationship to hip-hop in academic institutions remains fraught. Part of the problem was noted in 2014 by Michelle Alexander, a legal scholar and author of “The New Jim Crow,” when she talked about her concerns aboutthe legalization of marijuana in different U.S. states. “In many ways the imagery doesn’t s...

    In the late 1990s, I saw how fast hip-hop had become inescapable across the U.S., even in the small Midwestern town of Decatur, Illinois, where I grew up with my friend who is now serving federal prison time. He and I have remained in contact. Among the things we discuss is how unlikely it is that I would be able to do what I do without his doing w...

  5. The earliest known use of the noun dope is in the 1850s. OED's earliest evidence for dope is from 1851, in Glossary of Provincial Words Cumberland.

  6. www.wordorigins.org › big-list-entries › dopedope — Wordorigins.org

    Nov 15, 2023 · The use of dope, referring to a sauce or gravy, dates to the early nineteenth century. It’s first recorded in the writing of Washington Irving, who clearly thought it came from the Dutch. Here is Irving proffering a specious etymology for the name of Philadelphia in his Salmagundi #10 of 16 May 1807:

  7. The earliest known use of the adjective dope is in the 1980s. OED's earliest evidence for dope is from 1981, in the song Money by J. Spicer. It is also recorded as a noun from the 1850s.

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