drop

/drɒp/ (bre, ipa) · /drɑːp/ (ame, ipa) · /ˈdräp/ (ame, mw)

drop — verb

1. to release your grip on something so that it goes down toward the floor or groun

1.動詞及物 / 不及物B1
釋義

to release your grip on something so that it goes down toward the floor or ground, often without meaning to; or to go down from a higher position to a lower one

例句

Minho accidentally dropped his phone on the kitchen floor and cracked the screen.

transitive: drop + object (phone)

The glass slipped from Élise's hand and dropped onto the stone step below.

intransitive: drop onto [surface]

同義詞
  • fall

    intransitive only; 'drop' can be both transitive and intransitive

  • let go of

    emphasises the release action; more deliberate than 'drop'

反義詞
  • lift

    move something upward instead of downward

  • hold

    keep something in your hand instead of releasing it

文法句型

drop + object

drop (no object)

用法筆記

This sense covers both accidental falls (drop a cup) and deliberate releases (drop a rope). The transitive form requires a direct object; the intransitive form describes the object that falls as the subject.

常見錯誤

I dropped down my keys.
I dropped my keys.
💡'drop' already includes the idea of falling; 'down' is unnecessary.
The cup dropped off from the table.
The cup dropped off the table.
💡'off' replaces 'from' when saying what surface something fell from.

2. to fall down suddenly because you are very ill, injured, or exhausted; to die wi

2.動詞不及物C2
釋義

to fall down suddenly because you are very ill, injured, or exhausted; to die without warning

例句

During the marathon, two runners dropped from heat exhaustion near the fifteenth kilometre.

intransitive: drop from [cause]

The old horse had been ill for weeks and finally dropped in the pasture one morning.

同義詞
  • collapse

    can also mean fall from tiredness without dying; 'drop' implies either death or complete collapse

  • keel over

    informal, similar meaning, often suggests suddenness

文法句型

drop (no object)

drop dead

用法筆記

Frequently used in the fixed phrase 'drop dead' as an exclamation (informal, rude) or literally. In narrative descriptions of death from illness or old age, 'drop' is less common in modern English than 'pass away' or 'die'.

3. to send someone a short, informal written message, such as a letter, email, or t

3.動詞及物B1
釋義

to send someone a short, informal written message, such as a letter, email, or text

例句

Ramón promised to drop his grandmother a postcard while he was travelling around Japan.

drop + person + a postcard

If you hear about any job openings, please drop me an email and let me know.

同義詞
  • send

    neutral and can be used for any length or formality of message

  • write

    focuses on the act of composing, not sending

文法句型

drop + somebody + a line / note / message

用法筆記

Commonly used in the fixed expressions 'drop someone a line' (write a short letter) and 'drop someone a note'. The message is always short and informal — do not use this for formal letters or official documents.

常見錯誤

I dropped a formal complaint to the manager.
I sent a formal complaint to the manager.
💡'drop' is too informal for official correspondence.
Please drop me a long letter about your trip.
Please drop me a line about your trip.
💡'drop a line' implies a short note, not a long detailed letter.

4. to mention a topic or piece of information as though by chance, often to test ho

4.動詞及物B2
釋義

to mention a topic or piece of information as though by chance, often to test how someone responds or to share news without appearing to make a big deal of it

例句

Ayana dropped a hint about wanting a bicycle for her birthday, hoping her parents would notice.

drop a hint about [topic]

During dinner, Christopher's boss dropped that the company might be hiring a new manager soon.

drop + that-clause for indirectly giving news

同義詞
  • mention

    neutral; 'drop' adds a sense of casualness or subtlety

  • let slip

    implies the information was revealed accidentally rather than deliberately

文法句型

drop + a hint / comment / remark

drop + that-clause

用法筆記

Often used with 'hint' (drop a hint) to mean giving a subtle suggestion. When dropping a name, it implies mentioning a well-known person to impress others. The that-clause pattern ('drop that…') is common in storytelling and reported speech.

常見錯誤

She dropped that she was leaving the company in a direct announcement.
She dropped that she was leaving the company during a casual chat.
💡'drop' implies an indirect or casual delivery, not a formal announcement.

5. to lower a heavy metal anchor into the water to stop a ship or boat from moving

5.動詞及物B2
釋義

to lower a heavy metal anchor into the water to stop a ship or boat from moving away

例句

The captain decided to drop anchor near the small island so the crew could rest for the night.

fixed phrase: drop anchor

As the wind grew stronger, the fishing boat dropped anchor close to the harbour wall.

反義詞

文法句型

drop + anchor

用法筆記

Almost exclusively used with 'anchor' as the object. The phrase 'drop anchor' is a fixed nautical expression. Can also be used figuratively: 'We dropped anchor at a small café and stayed for hours.'

6. to leave out a sound, letter, or syllable when speaking or writing a word

6.動詞及物B2
釋義

to leave out a sound, letter, or syllable when speaking or writing a word

例句

In some British accents, speakers drop the letter 'h' at the start of words like 'hotel'.

drop + the letter [x]

Justin noticed that his grandmother often dropped the 'g' at the end of words, saying 'runnin'' instead of 'running'.

passive: [letter] is dropped

同義詞
  • omit

    more formal; 'drop' is used in everyday speech about pronunciation

  • skip

    suggests intention; 'drop' can be habitual or unconscious

反義詞
  • pronounce

    to say a sound instead of leaving it out

  • include

    to keep the letter or sound in the word

文法句型

drop + a letter / sound / syllable

be dropped (passive)

用法筆記

When describing pronunciation, 'drop' is used for sounds that are left out in certain dialects or casual speech. 'H-dropping' is a well-known feature of some British English accents. In writing, dropping letters is common in abbreviations and text messaging.

常見錯誤

I dropped the word from the sentence because I forgot it.
I left the word out of the sentence.
💡'drop' for omitting is used for sounds/letters in pronunciation, not for forgetting words in writing.

7. When an amount, level, value, or sound becomes lower or less; or when you cause

7.動詞及物 / 不及物B2
釋義

When an amount, level, value, or sound becomes lower or less; or when you cause it to become lower or less — for example, temperatures dropping at night, a company dropping its prices, or someone dropping their voice to a whisper.

例句

Temperatures in the city are expected to drop below zero tonight.

intransitive: temperature + drop + below [number]

The company dropped the price of its new phone by twenty percent after poor sales.

transitive: drop + price + by [amount]

同義詞
  • fall

    more general, works for prices and temperatures too

  • decline

    more gradual, slightly more formal (often for numbers or quality)

  • decrease

    more formal, also commonly used as a noun

反義詞
  • rise

    opposite direction for level or amount

  • increase

    opposite for value, number, or amount

文法句型

drop + noun (price / voice / temperature)

drop + adverb (sharply / steeply / below)

用法筆記

Can be used for quantities (prices, temperatures, sales), sound volume (voice), or physical slope (path, land). Frequently intransitive when the subject is the thing that decreases.

常見錯誤

The prices dropped down by ten percent.
The prices dropped by ten percent.
💡'drop' already implies downward movement; adding 'down' is redundant.

8. To stop doing, discussing, or continuing with something — especially a plan, act

8.動詞及物B2
釋義

To stop doing, discussing, or continuing with something — especially a plan, activity, or subject of conversation.

例句

We dropped the idea of building a new garage because it cost too much.

drop + idea / plan

Élise dropped her history class after the first month because she found it too difficult.

drop + class / course

同義詞
  • abandon

    stronger and more final, often for plans or projects

  • quit

    more informal, common for jobs, habits, or classes

反義詞

文法句型

drop + noun (idea / plan / class / subject)

drop + gerund (studying / going / doing)

用法筆記

Often followed by a gerund (dropped studying) when referring to discontinuing an activity. Common objects include ideas, classes, subjects, and investigations.

常見錯誤

I dropped to study history.
I dropped studying history.
💡when 'drop' means to stop an activity, it is followed by a gerund, not an infinitive.

9. To remove someone from a team, group, or social network; to end a personal conne

9.動詞及物B2
釋義

To remove someone from a team, group, or social network; to end a personal connection with someone; or to discard something that is no longer wanted.

例句

The coach dropped two players from the team after they missed three training sessions.

drop + person + from + team/group

Xiu dropped her old friends from high school after she moved to a different city.

drop + friends (end social contact)

同義詞
  • exclude

    more formal, less common in everyday speech

  • get rid of

    more informal, mainly for objects or things

  • omit

    used when leaving items out of a list or text, not for social relationships

反義詞
  • include

    opposite action

  • add

    bring someone or something into a group

文法句型

drop + person + from + group/team

drop + ties/contact + with + person

drop + noun (object you no longer need)

用法筆記

Common in sports (players dropped from a team), social contexts (stop seeing someone), and logistics (remove items from a list or inventory). The person or thing being excluded is the direct object; the group is introduced with 'from'.

常見錯誤

The coach dropped the team the lazy player.
The coach dropped the lazy player from the team.
💡use 'from' to specify the group the person is excluded from.

10. To give someone a ride to a location and then leave them there; or to deliver an

10.動詞及物C1
釋義

To give someone a ride to a location and then leave them there; or to deliver an item to a specific place, typically as a stop during a longer journey.

例句

Anthony drops the children at school every morning on his way to the office.

drop + person + at + place (by car)

Could you drop these documents at the lawyer's office when you go downtown?

drop + object + at + place (deliver on the way)

同義詞
  • deliver

    more formal, for packages and goods only

  • take

    more general, does not imply leaving the person there

反義詞
  • pick up

    opposite action — collect someone or something from a place

文法句型

drop + person + at + place

drop + object + at/in + place

drop + person/object + off

用法筆記

Almost always used with a location phrase (at/at a place). The phrasal verb 'drop off' is very common and interchangeable in everyday speech. 'Drop' alone sounds slightly more formal or abbreviated.

常見錯誤

I dropped my son school.
I dropped my son at school.' or 'I dropped my son off at school.
💡a location phrase (at, in front of, by) is required.

11. When a new product, album, film, or piece of digital content is made public so p

11.動詞及物 / 不及物B2
釋義

When a new product, album, film, or piece of digital content is made public so people can purchase, view, listen to, or use it; or for a company to release such content.

例句

The band plans to drop their new album in March next year.

transitive: drop + album / single

A major software update for the app dropped yesterday and fixed several bugs.

intransitive: update / version drops

同義詞
  • release

    the standard, more formal industry term

  • launch

    often implies a big promotional event, common for products

  • put out

    slightly more informal, common for music and media

文法句型

drop + noun (album / single / product / trailer)

noun + drops (intransitive, e.g., 'the album drops')

用法筆記

Originally popular in US hip-hop and music culture ('drop a beat'), now used broadly for any new content release. Can be used transitively (the company drops something) or intransitively (the content drops). More informal than 'release' or 'launch'.

12. To be defeated in a game, match, or contest and not obtain victory.

12.動詞及物B1
釋義

To be defeated in a game, match, or contest and not obtain victory.

例句

The team dropped their first three games of the season before winning any at all.

drop + game / match (sports context)

Emre dropped the final match even though he was leading by two sets.

drop + final / match (tennis)

同義詞
  • lose

    more general, can be used in any context

  • surrender

    stronger, implies giving up rather than simply losing

反義詞
  • win

    opposite — to be successful in a game or competition

文法句型

drop + noun (game / match / set / point / race)

用法筆記

Common in sports journalism and commentary. The object must be the game, match, or points — not the opponent ('drop a game' is correct; 'drop a team' is not). Frequently used in British English for football (soccer) matches.

常見錯誤

They dropped the opposing team 3-0.
They lost to the opposing team 3-0.' or 'They dropped the match 3-0.
💡'drop' means to lose, not to defeat.

drop — noun