The AI-powered English dictionary
plural slops
(obsolete) A loose outer garment; a jacket or overall.
(South Africa, chiefly in the plural) A rubber thong sandal. examples
(in the plural) See slops. examples
countable and uncountable, plural slops
(uncountable) Semi-solid like substance; goo, paste, mud, pulp. examples
(sometimes in the plural) Scraps used as food for animals, especially pigs or hogs. examples
(chiefly in the plural) Inferior, weak drink or semi-liquid food. examples
(sometimes in the plural) Domestic liquid waste; household wastewater. examples
Water or other liquid carelessly spilled or thrown about, as upon a table or a floor; a puddle; a soiled spot. examples
(dated) Human urine or excrement. examples
(slang) Fellatio. quotations
All on my dick, she won't stop, yahI told her to give me some slop
2018, “Pull Up”, in Northsbest, performed by Lil Mosey
third-person singular simple present slops, present participle slopping, simple past and past participle slopped
(transitive) To spill or dump liquid, especially over the edge of a container when it moves. examples
(transitive) To spill liquid upon; to soil with a spilled liquid. quotations examples
a little Durham bull butted the pail and slopped him with the milk
1950, Howard William Troyer, The salt and the savor, page 58
(transitive) In the game of pool or snooker to pocket a ball by accident; in billiards, to make an ill-considered shot. examples
(transitive) To feed pigs. examples
(intransitive) To make one's way through soggy terrain. quotations examples
We slopped through paddies in 100-degree-plus heat and slept with one eye open at night.
1980, The Leatherneck, volume 63, page 13
(uncommon, costermongers) A policeman. quotations examples
Harry looked rather bulky, you know, Tom, and the slop (policeman) says, 'Hallo, what you got here?' and by [blank] he took us both before the beak. After hearing the slop tell his tale, he says to me: 'What do you know of this man? […]
1866, Temple Bar: A London Magazine for Town and Country Readers
Covey’s most stimulating impression on the sense of colour is in the blue of the police. He says he shouldn’t have thought that there were so many ‘slops’ in the world, and he seems to yield for a moment to the depressing conviction that we are too much governed.
1899, Richard Whiteing, chapter XXIV, in No. 5 John Street, page 240