slug
oxford
views updated May 23 2018slug1 / sləg/ •
n. 1. a tough-skinned terrestrial mollusk (order Stylommatophora, class Gastropoda) that typically lacks a shell and secretes a film of mucus for protection. It can be a serious plant pest. See also sea slug. 2. a slow, lazy person; a sluggard. 3. an amount of an alcoholic drink, typically liquor, that is gulped or poured: he took a slug of whiskey. 4. an elongated, typically rounded piece or metal. ∎ a counterfeit coin; a token. ∎ a bullet, esp. one of lead. ∎ a missile for an air gun. ∎ a line of type in Linotype printing. ∎ Printing a metal bar used in spacing.•
v. (slugged
, slugging
) [tr.] drink (something, typically alcohol) in a large draft; swig.slug2 inf. •
v. (slugged, slug·ging) [tr.] strike (someone) with a hard blow: he was the one who'd get slugged. ∎ (slug it out) settle a dispute or contest by fighting or competing fiercely: they went outside to slug it out.•
n. a hard blow.
The Oxford Pocket Dictionary of Current English
slug
oxford
views updated May 23 2018slug1 sluggard XV; †slow-sailing vessel XVI; slow-moving shell-less land-snail XVIII. Based on a stem
slug-, repr. also by
slug vb. be slow or inert (XV) and earlier by, e.g., †
sluggy sluggish (XIII); prob. of Scand. orig. (cf. Sw. dial.
slogga be sluggish, Norw. dial.
slugg large heavy body).
So
sluggish (
-ISH1),
sluggard (
-ARD) XIV,
slugabed XVI.
The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Etymology T. F. HOAD
slug
oxford
views updated Jun 08 2018slug Mostly terrestrial gastropod
mollusc, identified by the lack of shell and uncoiled viscera. It secretes a protective slime, which is also used to aid locomotion. Length: to 20cm (8in). Class Gastropoda; subclass Pulmonata; genera Arion, Limax. See also
sea slug World Encyclopedia
slug
oxford
views updated May 29 2018slug2 irregularly shaped bullet XVII; (typogr.) metal bar, line of type XIX. perh. identical with prec.
The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Etymology T. F. HOAD