Definition of "lollop"
lollop
verb
third-person singular simple present lollops, present participle lolloping, simple past and past participle lolloped
To walk or move with a bouncing or undulating motion and at an unhurried pace.
Quotations
Every available spyglass was directed towards this strange sail. It appeared, as we all watched it, to lollop up and down, as it were, with the jerk of the sea, according to no regular motion of a ship or boat.
1861, “Chinese Slaves Adrift”, in All the Year Round: A Weekly Journal, volume 5, page 251
And the Camel said ‘Humph!’ again; but no sooner had he said it than he saw his back, that he was so proud of, puffing up and puffing up into a great big lolloping humph.
1902, Rudyard Kipling, “How the Camel Got His Hump”, in Just So Stories: For Little Children, New York, N.Y.: Doubleday, Page & Company
The carts rattle by, swinging from side to side; two Chinamen lollop along under their wooden yokes with the straining vegetable baskets—their pigtails and blue blouses fly out in the wind.
1920 August 27, Katherine Mansfield [pseudonym; Kathleen Mansfield Murry], “The Wind Blows”, in Bliss and Other Stories, London: Constable & Company, published 1920, page 137
With a timid, loutish movement the great beast turned aside, then lumbered off followed by the calf. The other buffalo also extricated itself from the slime and lolloped away.
1934 October, George Orwell [pseudonym; Eric Arthur Blair], chapter 6, in Burmese Days, New York, N.Y.: Harper & Brothers, Publishers
(obsolete) To act lazily, loll, lie around.
Quotations
Mr. Meadows, who was seated in the middle of the box, was lolloping upon the table with his customary ease, and picking his teeth with his usual inattention to all about him.
1782, [Frances Burney], chapter 12, in Cecilia, or Memoirs of an Heiress. […], volumes (please specify |volume=I to V), London: […] T[homas] Payne and Son […], and T[homas] Cadell […], book, page 146
“Your uncle is, and always will be, a dull calculator, Nell,” observed the mother, after a long pause in a conversation that had turned on the labours of the day; “a lazy hand at figures and foreknowledge is that said Ishmael Bush! Here he sat lolloping about the rock from light till noon, doing nothing but scheme—scheme—scheme— […] ”
1827, James Fenimore Cooper, chapter 11, in The Prairie