pop
/pɒp/
A loud, sharp sound as of a cork coming out of a bottle.
Listen to the pop of a champagne cork.
(Midwest US) An effervescent or fizzy drink, most frequently nonalcoholic; soda pop.
Lunch was sandwiches and a bottle of pop.
(Midwest US) A bottle, can, or serving of effervescent or fizzy drink, most frequently nonalcoholic; soda pop.
Go in the store and buy us three pops.
A pop shot: a quick, possibly unaimed, shot with a firearm.
The man with the gun took a pop at the rabbit.
(in the phrase "a pop") A quantity dispensed, a portion, apiece.
They cost 50 pence a pop.
Something that stands out or is distinctive, especially to the senses.
a pop of vanilla flavour
The removal of a data item from the top of a stack.
A bird, the European redwing.
The sixth derivative of the position vector with respect to time (after velocity, acceleration, jerk, jounce, crackle), i.e. the rate of change of crackle.
A pistol.