Skip to main content

slip on

/slip-on, -awn/US // ˈslɪpˌɒn, -ˌɔn //

溜须拍马,溜达,滑动,溜达一下

Definitions

adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : made without buttons, straps, zippers, etc., so as to be put on easily and quickly: a slip-on blouse; slip-on shoes.
n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : something made this way, especially an article of clothing.

Synonyms & Antonyms

as intrip
as inwear
as indress

Examples

  • Just the hard-on before you shoot unarmed members of the public.

  • Three on-the-record stories from a family: a mother and her daughters who came from Phoenix.

  • You just travel light with carry-on luggage, go to cities that you love, and get to hang out with all your friends.

  • It was a brick wall that we turned into the on-ramp of a highway.

  • Could the (thus far) timid trembling give way to a full-on, grand mal seizure?

  • Q was a Queen, who wore a silk slip; R was a Robber, and wanted a whip.

  • So my mother begged me to slip into the Rooms, with what was left, and try to get something back.

  • What the economist does is to slip out of the difficulty altogether by begging the whole question.

  • Only then did I own that by hook or by crook—and mostly by crook, I was forced to suspect—they had purposely given me the slip.

  • It's easy for a prisoner t' slip a note to a friend that happens t' be mountin' guard.