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Discover LudwigThe phrase "whoops me" is not correct and not commonly used in written English.
It seems to be an informal expression that may be intended to convey a sense of making a mistake or an accident, but it lacks clarity and standard usage.
Example: "I accidentally sent the wrong email, whoops me!"
Alternatives: "my bad" or "oops, my mistake".
Exact(1)
"He whoops me pretty good," Kinsler said, describing their chess games, "and he's not scared to let me know.
Similar(57)
"He was a huge guy, but he could really move around that table, so he whooped me".
When they passed, I was like: 'It's no holds barred now, I have nobody to whoop me or punish me if I do this wrong.
And often, "My Mom/Dad whooped me and I deserved it.
You know, 'My father whooped me and I whoop my kid and it was just an accident.'.
Grand [Master Bey] rolled me and whooped me up a little bit -- and I really like that he was able to whoop my ass".
My dad would whoop me: 'You're not going to school now, you'll embarrass us!' But I never gave a f— what people think".
Elaine, Louise and Maggie start hyping me up, whooping, telling me I'm great even though they haven't seen me sing.
Let's join him shall we? Whoops, let me sign out first.
And then on this one, they're like whooping on me".
The guy driving the car is whooping at me as I bend my knees a little, feeling the beat as if I were rolling a hula hoop around my waist, my raised arms moving from side to side.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com