v
(transitive, intransitive, rare, obsolete) To flee away; escape.
v
(intransitive, obsolete) To slip away.
v
(intransitive, obsolete) To slip away.
v
(transitive) To elude; slip from.
v
(idiomatic) To be in rapid decline or a state of downfall, especially as leading to inevitable utter failure or destruction.
v
(Scotland, intransitive) To cease.
v
(idiomatic) To leave (school, a race, etc.) prematurely and voluntarily.
adj
(simile, colloquial) Very easy.
n
(slang) The act of disappearing from a place so as not to be found; covert departure.
n
Synonym of falling out (“rift following a disagreement or quarrel”)
n
(idiomatic) A rift between people or groups, often following a disagreement or quarrel
n
(idiomatic) A person in unfamiliar and often uncomfortable surroundings.
v
(transitive, obsolete) To let slip; allow someone or something to escape.
v
(intransitive) To fail; to miscarry.
n
(uncommon) Synonym of nip slip
v
To slip from one's control.
v
(UK) Alternative form of go off on a tangent [(US) Synonym of fly off at a tangent]
v
(idiomatic) To droop or sag heavily; to remain at a low altitude.
n
(rare) A gliding in; an immission or entrance of one thing into another.
v
From that point on, Dallas was never the same. It hit its peak. It lost credibility. It jumped the shark.
n
A temporary failure; a slip.
n
A slip, lapse, or error.
adj
Alternative form of easy as falling off a log [(simile, colloquial) Very easy.]
v
(transitive, UK dialectal, Northern England, Scotland) To entrust; trust to (someone/something).
v
(transitive) To force (a lock) by slipping a credit card or similar thin object between the door and the frame.
v
(also chess) To make a mouse slip.
n
Alternative form of nip slip [(slang) The brief accidental exposure of a woman's breast, usually partially and on the side.]
v
(athletics) To fail to record a valid score, and produce a score of 0 or no-height, by failing to make a valid jump in high jump or pole vault, and faulting out of competition.
adj
(slang, humorous, simile) Going away; taking one's departure.
v
(intransitive, Scotland, obsolete) To escape
v
(poetic) To slide outward, onward, or forward; to advance by sliding.
n
(obsolete) Something that has slipped out; a mistake, a slip.
v
(transitive) To slip or slide over; to pass easily or carelessly beyond.
n
Synonym of Freudian slip
v
(transitive, idiomatic) To discuss ad nauseam.
v
Pronunciation spelling of sit down. [(intransitive) To assume a sitting position from a standing position.]
n
A person who attempts to disappear so as not to be found.
n
(Britain, informal) Something very easy, where one can slack off without penalty.
v
(intransitive, obsolete) To pass inadvertently.
v
To leave a place, a meeting, etc., without being noticed; to slip away, slip off.
v
(transitive) To throw heedlessly.
v
(intransitive) To accidentally reveal a secret or otherwise say something unintentional.
v
To leave a place, or a gathering, without being noticed.
v
(transitive, intransitive, sometimes figuratively) To pass without being noticed or intercepted.
v
(intransitive, of a drink) To be easily imbibed; to be easy to drink.
v
(transitive) To enter discreetly
v
To smuggle (something) to someone; to surreptitiously pass (something) to someone.
n
(idiomatic) A mistake in handwriting.
n
(idiomatic) A mistake in speech.
v
To leave a place, or a meeting, without being noticed
v
To sneak something through a process or inspection; to hide something or conceal a fact; to prevent attention being drawn to something.
v
To leave quietly, and unnoticed.
v
(nautical, slang, dated) To die.
v
To barely pass; to minimally succeed at something.
v
To elude someone in the end, despite having almost been achieved or captured.
v
(idiomatic) To escape notice or lack sufficient attention.
v
(idiomatic) To go unnoticed, especially for a long period of time.
n
(idiomatic) A (small) error or mistake; a (minor) misstep.
n
Dated spelling of slippage.
n
The collapse and sliding away of part of a road etc.
n
The act of slipping, especially from a secure location.
n
(law enforcement) Particularly, the error by which a police officer bears a gun while intending to take out a Taser instead.
n
Alternative form of slip-up [(idiomatic) A (small) error or mistake; a (minor) misstep.]
v
(informal, intransitive) To depart quietly, without being noticed.
v
To evade a question, an interviewer etc.
n
The spontaneous jerking motion that can occur as two objects slide over each other.
v
(transitive, informal) To drive away from a place by a stink.
v
To go out of a straight line; to deflect.
n
(cricket) a fielding position to the off side of second slip; a fielder in that position
v
(intransitive, obsolete) To scatter.
v
(intransitive) To fall over or stumble over an object as a result of striking it with one's foot
v
(transitive, intransitive, slang) To run away (from); to flee.
v
Alternative form of vamoose [(transitive, intransitive, slang) To run away (from); to flee.]
v
(intransitive) To go astray or be deflected from a true, proper or moral course; to deviate.
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