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slop "

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    • \ ˈsläp 

    • \ ˈslip-ˌsläp \

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    [Noun]  | "slop" | \ ˈsläp \


    1: a loose smock or overall

    2: short full breeches worn by men in the 16th century

    3: articles (such as clothing) sold to sailors


    Origin: 14th century ;

     Middle English slop, sloppe "loose outer garment," going back to Old English -slop, in oferslop "loose outer garment, surplice," going back to Germanic *slupa- (whence also Middle Dutch slop "upper garment [as a priest's surplice]," overslop "upper garment, foreskin," Middle High German slopf, slupf "loop, noose," Old Icelandic sloppr "loose garment, vestment"), probably going back to an ablauting n-stem paradigm *slaubōn- (nominative), *sluppas (genitive), going back to Indo-European *slou̯bh-ōn-, *slubh-n-ós, derivative of the verbal base *sleu̯bh- "move easily, slip"{mat|sleeve|};

    [Noun]  | "slop" 


    1: soft mud : slush

    2: thin tasteless drink or liquid food —usually used in plural

    3: liquid spilled or splashed


    Origin: 15th century ;

     Of uncertain origin;

      * Note : This word has traditionally been traced back to Middle English sloppes, attested once, in the alliterative Morte Arthure (ca. 1440), and then further traced to Old English -sloppe in cusloppe, a variant of cūslyppe {cowslip|cowslip}, in which -sloppe is taken to mean "dung, excrement." The passage in the Morte Arthure in which sloppes occurs describes Arthur and his knights disembarking from boats and wading ashore: "Londis als a lyon with lordliche knyghtes, / Slippes in the sloppes o slante to þe girdyll" (lines 3922-23). The Middle English Dictionary tentatively defines the word as "muddy waters." Note that it forms an alliterative pair with slippes, from which it differs only by a vowel. No further attestations of slop appear before the seventeenth century, and then again often paired with slip. The sense "medicine in the form of a tasteless drink or liquid food" occurs in 1658 as slops, in 1668 as slip-slops. Though slip-slop has been taken as a compound based on slop, the possibility that the compound is actually based on slip suggests itself—in which case slop would be an affective coinage that may have been made more than once and is not datable to Old English. Compare {slop:3|slop:3}.;

    [Noun]  | "slop basin" 


    1: slop bowl


    Origin: 1731 ;

    [Noun]  | "slop bowl" 


    1: a bowl for receiving the leavings of tea or coffee cups at table


    Origin: 1810 ;

    [Noun]  | "slop chest" 


    1: a store of clothing and personal requisites (such as tobacco) carried on merchant ships for issue to the crew usually as a charge against their wages


    Origin: 1840 ;

     {see: |slop:1|slop:1};

    [Noun]  | "slop jar" 


    1: a large pail used as a chamber pot or to receive waste water from a washbowl or the contents of chamber pots


    Origin: 1855 ;

    [Noun]  | "slop pail" 


    1: a pail for toilet or household slops


    Origin: 1821 ;

    [Noun]  | "slip*slop" | \ ˈslip-ˌsläp \


    1: watery food : slops

    2: shallow talk or writing


    Origin: 1675 ;

     Reduplication of {see: |slop:2|slop:2};

    [Verb]  | "slop" 


    1: to spill from a container

    2: to splash or spill liquid on

    3: to cause (a liquid) to splash


    Origin: 1557 ;

     Probably derivative of {see: |slop:2|slop:2};

      * Note : The sense "to lap up," attested since the sixteenth century, may be of independent origin. The Oxford English Dictionary's citation from Thomas Tusser's A Hundreth Good Pointes of Husbandrie, printed in 1557 ("Their milke slapt in corners, their creame al to sost"), placed under the sense "to spill or splash (liquid)," is 250 years earlier than the next citation and probably an instance of a different word (slab?).;

    [Phrasal verb]  | "slop around/about" 


    1: to move or act in a lazy or relaxed way : to spend time resting or relaxing

    [Noun]  | "slop" 


    1: soft wet earth;


      * e.g., " ... slipped and fell in the slop behind the shed "



    •  Antonyms : 

    • (N/A)





    2: solid matter discharged from an animal's alimentary canal;


      * e.g., " ... cleaned the slops out of the cow barn "



    •  Antonyms : 

    • (N/A)





    3: that which is of low quality or worth;


      * e.g., " ... that songwriter turns out nothing but slop, and record buyers eat it up "



    •  Antonyms : 

    • (N/A)





    [Verb]  | "slop" 


    1: to cause (something liquid or mushy) to move along in sheets;


      * e.g., " ... she slopped water everywhere when she picked up the full pan "



    •  Antonyms : 

    • (N/A)





    2: to swallow or eat greedily;


      * e.g., " ... watched the game while slopping prodigious quantities of beer "



    •  Antonyms : 

    • (N/A)





     [ "slop" ]

    1: Oral sex of the highest caliber; known to make one's knees shake.

      * e.g.,  ... "Man, I need some fucking slop" "Cassie sucked my dick last week. Did she have that slop? Yeah, it was some slop." 

     [ "slop" ]

    1: Slop is whatever is leftover or unwanted.

      * e.g.,  ... That guy Shawn has got some serious slop in his life. 

     [ "slop" ]

    1: Cold cottage pie, shepherds pie, casserole etc. Deliberately eaten without warming up. Often going hand in hand with a foul stench.

      * e.g.,  ... "Blimmin 'eck lad, Jamie's eating slop again!' 

     [ "slop" ]

    1: food from mcdonalds, wendys, taco bell, etc.

      * e.g.,  ... i'm doing a slop run. you guys want anything? 

     [ "slop" ]

    1: A Stew like food that is cooked with no care or attention.

      * e.g.,  ... Dom served up slop at her dinner party. 


     [ "slop" ]

    2: School dinners.

     [ "slop" ]

    1: A shot in pool that you didn't mean to make because you were aiming for another ball or another pocket.

      * e.g.,  ... Its your turn, that was a slop shot. 

     [ "slop" ]

    1: a mashing motion usually occurring between two vaginas most commonly referred to with lesbian sex.

      * e.g.,  ... "There's nothing better then two hot, wet, lesbian pussies slopping together" The two girls slopped all night. 

     [ "slop" ]

    1: Vaginal discharge, either from being horny or just plain sloppy. Could be the result of an STD.

      * e.g.,  ... Oi! Cindy close ya legs girl ya drippin slop all over the joint. 

     [ "slop" ]

    1:  A very messy or sloppy individual.

      * e.g.,  ...  That kid Justin is a slop. Just look at the way he eats his food. 


     [ "slop" ]

    2:  A word (usually used in the form of a verb) that can be used for just about anything in just about any tense.

      * e.g.,  ... 2a. You tryn to slop me the ketchup. 

     [ "slop" ]

    1: slop is the cum left in a guy's fuck-chute that remains after he's been fucked in his asshole.

      * e.g.,  ... Shit -- I've got slop in my butthole now! 

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