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Slops   Listen
Slops

noun
1.
Wet feed (especially for pigs) consisting of mostly kitchen waste mixed with water or skimmed or sour milk.  Synonyms: pigswill, pigwash, slop, swill.
2.
Cheap clothing (as formerly issued to sailors in Britain).



Slop

noun
1.
Wet feed (especially for pigs) consisting of mostly kitchen waste mixed with water or skimmed or sour milk.  Synonyms: pigswill, pigwash, slops, swill.
2.
Deep soft mud in water or slush.  Synonym: mire.
3.
(usually plural) waste water from a kitchen or bathroom or chamber pot that has to be emptied by hand.
4.
(usually plural) weak or watery unappetizing food or drink.
5.
Writing or music that is excessively sweet and sentimental.  Synonyms: glop, mush, treacle.
verb
(past & past part. slopped; pres. part. slopping)
1.
Cause or allow (a liquid substance) to run or flow from a container.  Synonyms: spill, splatter.  "Splatter water"
2.
Walk through mud or mire.  Synonyms: slosh, splash, splosh, squelch, squish.
3.
Ladle clumsily.
4.
Feed pigs.  Synonym: swill.



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"Slops" Quotes from Famous Books



... fitting tight at the back, and with trains a yard long, on Church holidays or when they went to pay visits. But next morning they would get up at dawn, as usual, sweep out the rooms with a birch-broom, empty the slops, and clean ...
— The Brothers Karamazov • Fyodor Dostoyevsky

... radical politician's view, my dear," answered the vicar. "Let a man be apprenticed to a skilled trade, and carry a bricklayer's hod, or a carpenter's rule. Let him only wear slops and work in an engine-room, or use a mason's trowel—so long as he does these things and receives his wages weekly, he is a 'working-man;' and, must have the hours of labour made to suit him, the ...
— She and I, Volume 2 - A Love Story. A Life History. • John Conroy Hutcheson

... this fly is very abundant in localities where little or no horse manure is found, and in such cases it breeds in other manure, such as chicken manure in backyard poultry lots, or in slops or fermenting vegetable material, such as spent hops, moist bran, ensilage, or rotting potatoes. Accumulations of organic material on the dumping grounds of towns and cities often ...
— The House Fly and How to Suppress It - U. S. Department of Agriculture Farmers' Bulletin No. 1408 • L. O. Howard and F. C. Bishopp

... 2 Henry IV. act i. sc. 2. When Falstaff asks Page, "What said Master Dumbleton about the satin for my short cloak and slops!" Page replies, "He said, sir, you should procure him better assurance than Bardolph. He ...
— Character Sketches of Romance, Fiction and the Drama, Vol 1 - A Revised American Edition of the Reader's Handbook • The Rev. E. Cobham Brewer, LL.D.

... to be in circumstances of ease, if he could procure fresh meat once a week for his dinner. The streets had no sewers; they were without pavement or lamps. After nightfall, the chamber-shatters were thrown open, and slops unceremoniously emptied down, to the discomfiture of the wayfarer tracking his path through the narrow streets, with his ...
— History of the Conflict Between Religion and Science • John William Draper


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