slash
Pronunciation Noun
This text is extracted from the Wiktionary and it is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 license | Terms and conditions | Privacy policy 0.005
Pronunciation Noun
slash (plural slashes)
- A slashing action or motion, particularly:
- A swift, broad, cutting stroke made by an edged weapon or whip.
- A slash of his blade just missed my ear.
- (cricket) A wild swinging strike of the bat.
- (ice hockey, lacrosse) A hard swift lateral strike with a hockey or lacrosse stick, usually across another player's arms or legs.
- Any similar wide striking motion.
- He took a wild slash at the ball but the captain saved the team's skin by hacking it clear and setting up the team for a strike on the goal.
- (figuratively) A sharp reduction.
- After the war ended, the army saw a 50% slash in their operating budget.
- A swift, broad, cutting stroke made by an edged weapon or whip.
- A mark made by a slashing motion, particularly:
- Something resembling such a mark, particularly:
- (fashion) A slit in an outer garment exposing a lining or inner garment, usually of a contrasting color or design; any intentional long vertical cut in a garment. anchor Clearing
- (US, &, Canada) A clearing in a forest, (particularly) those made by logging, fire, or other violent action.
- We passed over the shoulder of a ridge and around the edge of a fire slash, and then we had the mountain fairly before us.
- (originally US, typography) The slash mark: the punctuation mark ⟨/⟩, sometimes (often proscribed) inclusive of any mark produced by a similar slashing movement of the pen, as the backslash ⟨\⟩.
- http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/slash
- http colon slash slash en dot wiktionary dot org slash wiki slash slash
- 1965, Dmitri A. Borgmann, Language on Vacation, page 240:
- Initial inquiries among professional typists uncover names like smallcaps slant, smallcaps slant line, smallcaps slash, and smallcaps slash mark. Examination of typing instruction manuals discloses additional names such as smallcaps diagonal and smallcaps diagonal mark, and other sources provide the designation smallcaps oblique.
- http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/slash
- (vulgar, slang) Female genitalia.
- (US, &, Canada) The loose woody debris remaining from a slash, (particularly, forestry) the trimmings left while preparing felled trees for removal.
- Slash generated during logging may constitute a fire hazard.
- (fandom slang) Slash fiction.
- 2013, Katherine Arcement, "Diary", London Review of Books, vol. 35, no. 5:
- Comments merely allow readers to proclaim themselves mortally offended by the content of a story, despite having been warned in large block letters of INCEST or SLASH (any kind of sex between two men or two women: the term originated with the Kirk/Spock pairing – it described the literal slash between their names).
- 2013, Katherine Arcement, "Diary", London Review of Books, vol. 35, no. 5:
- (deep cut) gash
- (typographic mark) slash mark; solidus (formal name); stroke (chiefly UK); forward slash, forward stroke, foreslash, frontslash, front slash (sometimes proscribed); virgule (marking line breaks); shilling mark (UK); slants, slant lines (marking pronunciations); separatrix (proofreading mark); scratch comma (former use as a form of comma); oblique, oblique mark, oblique stroke, oblique dash (chiefly UK); diagonal, diagonal mark (dated); virgula (obsolete); virgil (UK); whack (improper); bar (improper)
- (vulgar term for female genitalia) See cunt
- French: barre oblique, barre
- German: Bruchstrich, Schrägstrich
- Italian: barra, sbarretta obliqua, sbarretta
- Portuguese: barra, barra oblíqua
- Russian: слеш
- Spanish: barra oblicua, barra, slash, diagonal
- Italian: fessa
slash (slashes, present participle slashing; past and past participle slashed)
- To cut or attempt to cut, particularly:
- To cut with a swift broad stroke of an edged weapon.
- They slashed at him with their swords, but only managed to nick one of his fingers.
- She hacked and slashed her way across the jungle.
- To produce a similar wound with a savage strike of a whip.
- (ice hockey) To strike swiftly and laterally with a hockey stick, usually across another player's arms or legs.
- (figuratively) To reduce sharply.
- Competition forced them to slash prices.
- Profits are only up right now because they slashed overhead, but employee morale and product quality have collapsed too.
- (fashion) To create slashes in a garment.
- (figuratively) To criticize cuttingly.
- To cut with a swift broad stroke of an edged weapon.
- To strike violently and randomly, particularly:
- To move quickly and violently.
- To crack a whip with a slashing motion.
- (US, &, Canada) To clear land, (particularly, forestry) with violent action such as logging or brushfires or (agriculture, uncommon) through grazing.
- The province's traditional slash-and-burn agriculture was only sustainable with a much smaller population.
- (intransitive, fandom slang) To write slash fiction.
- French: entailler, taillader
- German: aufschlitzen
- Italian: tagliare. sfregiare, fendere, falciare, mietere
- Russian: полосова́ть
slash (not comparable)
- Used to note the sound or action of a slash.
- (US, &, Canada) Used to connect two or more identities in a list.
- 2001, Fabio Lanzoni, Zoolander:
- What this, the Slashie, means is that you consider me the best actor slash model and not the other way around.
- Saul Hudson is a famous musician/songwriter.
- Read: Saul Hudson is a famous musician-slash-songwriter.
- 2001, Fabio Lanzoni, Zoolander:
- (US, &, Canada) Used to list alternatives.
- Alternatives can be marked by the slash/stroke/solidus punctuation mark, a tall, right-slanting oblique line.
- Read: Alternatives can be marked by the slash-slash-stroke-slash-solidus punctuation mark, a tall, right-slanting oblique line.
- Alternatives can be marked by the slash/stroke/solidus punctuation mark, a tall, right-slanting oblique line.
slash (plural slashes)
- (obsolete, rare) A drink of something; a draft.
- (vulgar, British, slang) A piss: an act of urination.
- Where's the gents? I need to take a slash.
slash (slashes, present participle slashing; past and past participle slashed)
- (UK, slang, intransitive) To piss, to urinate.
- 1973, Martin Amis, The Rachel Papers, page 189:
- If you can slash in my bed (I thought) don't tell me you can't suck my cock.
- 1973, Martin Amis, The Rachel Papers, page 189:
- Portuguese: mijada
- Russian: пи́сать
- Spanish: hechar una meada
slash (plural slashes)
Verbslash (slashes, present participle slashing; past and past participle slashed)
- (Scotland, intransitive) To work in wet conditions.
slash (plural slashes)
- (UK) Alternative form of slatch: a deep trough of finely-fractured culm or a circular or elliptical pocket of coal.
This text is extracted from the Wiktionary and it is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 license | Terms and conditions | Privacy policy 0.005