(Roman mythology) goddess of abundance and fertility; wife of Saturn; counterpart of Greek Rhea and Cybele of ancient Asia Minor
"The ancient Roman festival was dedicated to Ops, the goddess who ensured the land's abundant harvests."
plural of op
"The baseball analyst broke down the team's OPS to show how well their hitters performed at the plate."
operations
Initialism of on-base plus slugging.
In plain English: Ops is short for operations, which refers to how something works or gets done behind the scenes.
"We had to call ops for help after our car broke down on the highway."
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of op
"The robot does not ops when it detects an obstacle in its path."
In plain English: To ops means to operate something, usually referring to running a computer system or managing business activities efficiently.
"I hope you do not have to ops up this broken lamp yourself since we are short on tools today."
The word "ops" comes from the Latin term for resources and wealth. It eventually entered English as a learned borrowing to represent these concepts.