sliver

noun
/ˈslɪv.ə(ɹ)/UK/ˈslɪv.ɚ/US

Etymology

From Middle English slivere, sliver from Middle English sliven (“to cut, cleave, split”), from Old English slīfan (as in tōslīfan (“to split, split up”)).

  1. derived from slīfan
  2. derived from sliven
  3. inherited from sliver

Definitions

  1. A long piece cut or rent off

    A long piece cut or rent off; a sharp, slender fragment.

    • This is the tasting ritual, the lay Eucharist of cheese. The buyer squeezes the sliver of cheese between his fingers to test its consistency, sniffs it, and then tastes it as delicately as if it were the most subtle caviar.
    • A sliver of bone has punctured a lung, and a small surgical operation was needed to remove it (would he like to keep the bone as a memento?--it is in a phial by his bedside).
  2. A strand, or slender roll, of cotton or other fiber in a loose, untwisted state, produced…

    A strand, or slender roll, of cotton or other fiber in a loose, untwisted state, produced by a carding machine and ready for the roving or slubbing which precedes spinning.

  3. Bait made of pieces of small fish.

  4. + 3 more definitions
    1. A narrow high-rise apartment building.

    2. A small amount of something

      A small amount of something; a drop in the bucket; a shred.

    3. To cut or divide into long, thin pieces, or into very small pieces

      To cut or divide into long, thin pieces, or into very small pieces; to cut or rend lengthwise; to slit.

      • to sliver wood
      • slips of yew, Sliver'd in the moon's eclipse
      • They'll sliver thee like a turnip.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for sliver. 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