Definition of Slop in English :

Define Slop in English

Slop meaning in English

Meaning of Slop in English

Pronunciation of Slop in English

Slop pronunciation in English

Pronounce Slop in English

Slop

see synonyms of slop

Noun

1. pigswill, pigwash, slop, slops, swill

wet feed (especially for pigs) consisting of mostly kitchen waste mixed with water or skimmed or sour milk

2. mire, slop

deep soft mud in water or slush

Example Sentences:
'they waded through the slop'

3. slop

(usually plural) waste water from a kitchen or bathroom or chamber pot that has to be emptied by hand

Example Sentences:
'she carried out the sink slops'

4. slop

(usually plural) weak or watery unappetizing food or drink

Example Sentences:
'he lived on the thin slops that food kitchens provided'

5. glop, mush, slop, treacle

writing or music that is excessively sweet and sentimental

Verb

6. slop, spill, splatter

cause or allow (a liquid substance) to run or flow from a container

Example Sentences:
'spill the milk'
'splatter water'

7. slop, slosh, splash, splosh, squelch, squish

walk through mud or mire

Example Sentences:
'We had to splosh across the wet meadow'

8. slop

ladle clumsily

Example Sentences:
'slop the food onto the plate'

9. slop, swill

feed pigs

WordNet Lexical Database for English. Princeton University. 2010.


Slop

see synonyms of slop
verbWord forms: slops, slopping or slopped
1. (when intr, often foll by about)
to cause (liquid) to splash or spill or (of liquid) to splash or spill
2. (transitive)
to splash liquid upon
3. (intr; foll by along, through, etc)
to tramp (through) mud or slush
4. (transitive)
to feed slop or swill to
to slop the pigs
5. (transitive)
to ladle or serve, esp clumsily
6. (intransitive; foll by over) informal, mainly US and Canadian
to be unpleasantly effusive
noun
7. 
a puddle of spilt liquid
8. (plural)
wet feed, esp for pigs, made from kitchen waste, etc
9. (plural)
waste food or liquid refuse
10. (plural)
the beer, cider, etc, spilt from a barrel while being drawn
11. (often plural)
the residue left after spirits have been distilled
12. (often plural) informal
liquid or semiliquid food of low quality
13. 
soft mud, snow, etc
14. informal
gushing speech or writing
noun
1. (plural)
sailors' clothing and bedding issued from a ship's stores
2. 
any loose article of clothing, esp a smock
3. (plural)
men's wide knee breeches worn in the 16th century
4. (plural)
shoddy manufactured clothing

Collins English Dictionary. Copyright © HarperCollins Publishers


Slop

see synonyms of slop
noun
1. 
watery snow or mud; slush
2. 
a splash or puddle of spilled liquid
3. 
any liquid or semiliquid food that is unappetizing or of poor quality
4.  [often pl.]
a. 
liquid waste of any kind
b.  US
kitchen waste or swill, used for feeding pigs, etc.
5.  Informal
excessive sentimentality in speech or writing
slops
verb intransitiveWord forms: slopped or ˈslopping
6. 
to spill or splash
7. 
to walk or splash through slush or mud
verb transitive
8. 
to spill liquid on
9. 
to spill
10.  US
to feed swill or slops to (pigs, etc.)

Webster’s New World College Dictionary, 4th Edition. Copyright © 2010 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. All rights reserved.


Slop

see synonyms of slop
n.
1. Spilled or splashed liquid.
2. Soft mud or slush.
3. Unappetizing watery food or soup.
4. often slops Waste food used to feed pigs or other animals; swill.
5. often slops Mash remaining after alcohol distillation.
6. often slops Human excrement.
7. Repulsively effusive writing or speech; drivel.
v. slopped, slop·ping, slops
v.intr.
1. To be spilled or splashed: Suds slopped over the rim of the washtub.
2. To spill over; overflow.
3. To walk heavily or messily in or as if in mud; plod: "He slopped along in broken slippers, hands in pockets, whistling" (Alan Sillitoe).
4. To express oneself effusively; gush.
v.tr.
1. To spill (liquid).
2. To spill liquid on.
3. To serve unappetizingly or clumsily; dish out: slopped some lasagna onto his plate.
4. To feed slops to (animals): slopped the hogs.
n.
1. slops Articles of clothing and bedding issued or sold to sailors.
2. slops Short full trousers worn in the 16th century.
3. A loose outer garment, such as a smock or overalls.
4. slops Chiefly British Cheap, ready-made garments.

The American Heritage ® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition copyright ©2018 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.