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Slime   /slaɪm/   Listen
noun
Slime  n.  
1.
Soft, moist earth or clay, having an adhesive quality; viscous mud. "As it (Nilus) ebbs, the seedsman Upon the slime and ooze scatters his grain."
2.
Any mucilaginous substance; any substance of a dirty nature, that is moist, soft, and adhesive.
3.
(Script.) Bitumen. (Archaic) "Slime had they for mortar."
4.
pl. (Mining) Mud containing metallic ore, obtained in the preparatory dressing.
5.
(Physiol.) A mucuslike substance which exudes from the bodies of certain animals.
Slime eel. (Zool.) See 1st Hag, 4.
Slime pit, a pit for the collection of slime or bitumen.



verb
Slime  v. t.  (past & past part. slimed; pres. part. sliming)  To smear with slime.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Slime" Quotes from Famous Books



... life and across the history of all life that goes to make the world, strugglingly mastering the abysmal slime of the prehistoric with the love that had come into existence and had become warp and woof of him in far later time, his wrath of ancientness still faintly reverberating in his throat like the rumblings of a passing thunder-storm, knew, in the wide warm ways ...
— Jerry of the Islands • Jack London

... The cold slime of the ditch covered his whole body; and, when the bell rang for study and the lines filed out of the playrooms, he felt the cold air of the corridor and staircase inside his clothes. He still tried to think ...
— A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man • James Joyce

... land! O dear long-suffering land, Slay thou the serpent ere he slime the core! Take thou our houses and amenities, Take thou the hand that parting clings to ours, And going bears our heart into the fight; Take thou, but slay the serpent ...
— Atlantic Monthly, Volume 14, No. 84, October, 1864 - A Magazine Of Literature, Art, And Politics • Various

... of the real organic life which may have populated the earth and the sea. What a poor picture of the present plant and animal life would be offered, for instance, by the soil of our continents, the slime, sand, and pebbles of our coasts and of the bottoms of our lakes and seas, if we had to construct from them alone the fauna and flora of the present! A third, but purely hypothetical, consideration is rendered of importance particularly by Darwin and Haeckel; namely, that the forms ...
— The Theories of Darwin and Their Relation to Philosophy, Religion, and Morality • Rudolf Schmid

... climbed up, and made it lean so much on one side, that I was forced to balance it with all my weight on the other, to prevent overturning. When the frog was got in, it hopped at once half the length of the boat, and then over my head, backward and forward, daubing my face and clothes with its odious slime. The largeness of its features made it appear the most deformed animal that can be conceived. However, I desired Glumdalclitch to let me deal with it alone. I banged it a good while with one of my sculls, and at last forced it to leap ...
— Gulliver's Travels - into several remote nations of the world • Jonathan Swift


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