Slug

ahd-5
  • noun. Any of various terrestrial gastropod mollusks having a slow-moving slimy elongated body with no shell or with a flat rudimentary shell on or under the skin, usually found in moist habitats.
  • noun. A sea slug.
  • noun. The smooth soft larva of certain insects, such as the sawfly.
  • noun. A slimy mass of aggregated amoeboid cells that develops into the spore-bearing fruiting body of a cellular slime mold.
  • noun. A sluggard.
  • intransitive verb. To wait for or obtain a ride to work by standing at a roadside hoping to be picked up by a driver who needs another passenger to use the HOV lanes of a highway.
  • noun. A commuter who slugs.
  • noun. A round bullet larger than buckshot.
  • noun. undefined
  • noun. A shot of liquor.
  • noun. An amount of liquid, especially liquor, that is swallowed in one gulp; a swig.
  • noun. A small metal disk for use in a vending or gambling machine, especially one used illegally.
  • noun. A lump of metal or glass prepared for further processing.
  • noun. undefined
  • noun. A strip of type metal, less than type-high and thicker than a lead, used for spacing.
  • noun. A line of cast type in a single strip of metal.
  • noun. A compositor's type line of identifying marks or instructions, inserted temporarily in copy.
  • noun. The British unit of mass that accelerates at the rate of one foot per second per second when acted on by a force of one pound on the surface of the Earth.
  • transitive verb. To add slugs to.
  • transitive verb. To drink rapidly or in large gulps.
  • transitive verb. To strike heavily, especially with the fist or a bat.
  • noun. A hard heavy blow, as with the fist or a baseball bat.
  • The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia
  • To strike heavily. Compare slugger.
  • noun. A heavy or forcible blow; a hard hit.
  • noun. A rather heavy piece of crude metal, frequently rounded in form.
  • noun. Specifically— A bullet not regularly formed and truly spherical, such as were frequently used with smooth-bore guns or old-fashioned rifies. These were sometimes hammered, sometimes chewed into an approximately spherical form.
  • noun. Hence— Any projectile of irregular shape, as one of the pieces constituting mitraille
  • noun. A thick blank of typemetal made to separate lines of print and to show a line of white space; also, such a piece with a number or word, to be used temporarily as a direction or marking for any purpose, as in newspaper composing-rooms the distinctive number placed at the beginning of a compositor's “take,” to mark it as his work. Thin blanks are known as leads. All blanks thicker than one sixteenth of an inch are known as slugs, and are called by the names of their proper typebodies: as, nonpareil slugs; pica slugs
  • noun. A stunted horn. Compare scur.
  • To load with a slug or slugs, as a gun.
  • In gunnery, to assume the sectional shape of the bore when fired: said of a bullet slightly larger than the bore.
  • noun. In mining, a loop made in a rope for convenience in descending a shallow shaft, the miner putting his leg through the loop, by which he is supported while being lowered by the man at the windlass.
  • Slow; sluggish.
  • noun. A slow, heavy, lazy fellow; a sluggard; a slow-moving animal.
  • noun. Hence Any slow-moving thing.
  • noun. A hindrance; an obstruction.
  • noun. undefined
  • noun. A lead of extra thickness used to widen the space between lines of type.
  • noun. In mech., a name proposed by Worthington for the mass to which a gravitational unit of force must be applied to produce a foot-pound unit of acceleration; 32.2 (or g) times the mass of a standard pound.
  • noun. A terrestrial pulmonate gastropod of one of the families Limacidæ and Arionidæ and related ones, which has only a rudimentary shell, if any.
  • noun. Some or any slug-like soft-bodied insect or its larva; a grub: as, the yellow-spotted willow-slug, the larva of a saw-fly, Nematus ventralis. See pear-slug, rose-slug, slug-caterpillar, slug-worm.
  • noun. The trepang or sea-cucumber; any edible holothurian; a sea-slug.
  • To be slow, dull, or inert; be lazy; lie abed: said of persons or of things.
  • To make sluggish.
  • To hinder; retard.
  • the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English
  • intransitive verb. To move slowly; to lie idle.
  • transitive verb. To make sluggish.
  • intransitive verb. To become reduced in diameter, or changed in shape, by passing from a larger to a smaller part of the bore of the barrel; -- said of a bullet when fired from a gun, pistol, or other firearm.
  • transitive verb. To load with a slug or slugs.
  • transitive verb. To strike heavily.
  • Word Usage
    "The crawling speed of a slug may also depend on air temperature and humidity, whether or not the slug is also grazing on the tree surface while crawling, its species and size and the slope as well as the microscopic characteristics of the surface."
    cross-reference
    Form
    slugged  slugging  
    Hypernym
    Words that are more generic or abstract
    Hyponym
    Words that are more specific
    Rhyme
    Words with the same terminal sound
    Bug  Doug  Lug  Zug  antidrug  
    Same Context
    Words that are found in similar contexts
    ant  beetle  bug  bullet  cannon  
    Synonym
    Words with the same meaning
    variant
    slugged  slugging  
    verb-form
    slugged  slugging  slugs