chop‧per/ˈtʃɒpə $ ˈtʃɑːpər/ noun[COUNTABLE] 1. British English a large knife that you use for cutting large pieces of meat
2. informal a helicopter: ▪ There was a police chopper waiting for us.
3. a type of motorcycle on which the front wheel is further forward than the place where your hands rest
4. choppers [PLURAL] informal teeth: ▪ a row of huge white choppers
noun EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS ▪ But the Orex choppers are empty of provisions, and the pilots are only on rescue detail. ▪ I caught a supply chopper out to my platoon, which was already in the field. ▪ It put him off his stroke and the chopper slipped, cutting his finger. ▪ Jez should top her with a chopper. ▪ Luckily, a chopper got through, and we were resupplied with am-munition. ▪ The sooner Morgan boarded the chopper and pushed off the better. ▪ There were seven cheerleaders to a chopper, and then two choppers more for all their bags. ▪ Think Mary Lou Retton and her mouthful of polished choppers.