slippery

adj
/ˈslɪpəɹi/

Etymology

From Middle English slipperie, an extended form ( + -y) of Middle English slipper, sliper (“slippery”), from Old English slipor (“slippery”), from Proto-Germanic *slipraz (“smooth, slippery”), equivalent to slip + -er. Compare also Middle English slibbri, slubbri (“slippery”) borrowed from Middle Dutch or Middle Low German slibberich (“slippery”). Cognate with German schlüpfrig (“slippery”), Danish slibrig (“slippery”), Swedish slipprig (“slippery”).

  1. derived from *slipraz — “smooth, slippery
  2. derived from slipor — “slippery
  3. derived from slipper
  4. inherited from slipperie

Definitions

  1. Of a surface, having low friction, often due to being covered in a non-viscous liquid,…

    Of a surface, having low friction, often due to being covered in a non-viscous liquid, and therefore hard to grip, hard to stand on without falling, etc.

    • Oily substances render things slippery.
    • The screeching of brakes, the monotonous blare of motor horns, the clip-clip of shoes on slippery pavements, the rustling of wet mackintoshes were all part of the great metropolis.
  2. Evasive

    Evasive; difficult to pin down.

    • a slippery person
    • a slippery promise
  3. Liable to slip

    Liable to slip; not standing firm.

    • Which when they fall, as being slippery standers, / The love that leaned on them, as slippery too, / Do one pluck down another, and together / Die in the fall.
  4. + 2 more definitions
    1. Unstable

      Unstable; changeable; inconstant.

      • He looking down With scorn or pity on the slippery state Of kings, will tread upon the neck of fate.
    2. Wanton

      Wanton; unchaste; loose in morals.

      • My wife is slippery? If thou wilt confess –

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for slippery. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA