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All glops synonyms

glop
G g

noun glops

  • muck β€” moist farmyard dung, decaying vegetable matter, etc.; manure.
  • sludge β€” mud, mire, or ooze; slush.
  • gunk β€” any sticky or greasy residue or accumulation: gunk on the oil filter.
  • quagmire β€” an area of miry or boggy ground whose surface yields under the tread; a bog.
  • silt β€” earthy matter, fine sand, or the like carried by moving or running water and deposited as a sediment.
  • mucus β€” a viscous, slimy mixture of mucins, water, electrolytes, epithelial cells, and leukocytes that is secreted by glands lining the nasal, esophageal, and other body cavities and serves primarily to protect and lubricate surfaces.
  • grease β€” the melted or rendered fat of animals, especially when in a soft state.
  • sediment β€” the matter that settles to the bottom of a liquid; lees; dregs.
  • slush β€” partly melted snow.
  • crud β€” You use crud to refer to any disgustingly dirty or sticky substance.
  • ooze β€” (of moisture, liquid, etc.) to flow, percolate, or exude slowly, as through holes or small openings.
  • guck β€” slime or oozy dirt: the guck in a stagnant pond.
  • gook β€” a contemptuous term used to refer to a native of Southeast Asia or the South Pacific, especially a member of an enemy military force.
  • glop β€” unappetizing food, especially of a semiliquid consistency.
  • goo β€” a thick or sticky substance: Wash that goo off your hands.
  • swamp β€” a tract of wet, spongy land, often having a growth of certain types of trees and other vegetation, but unfit for cultivation.
  • fen β€” low land covered wholly or partially with water; boggy land; a marsh.
  • dirt β€” Design In Real Time
  • slime β€” thin, glutinous mud.
  • mud β€” wet, soft earth or earthy matter, as on the ground after rain, at the bottom of a pond, or along the banks of a river; mire.
  • marsh β€” Dame (Edith) Ngaio [nahy-oh] /ˈnaΙͺ oʊ/ (Show IPA), 1899–1982, New Zealand writer of detective novels.
  • moss β€” Howard, 1922–1987, U.S. poet, editor, and playwright.
  • bog β€” A bog is an area of land which is very wet and muddy.
  • quicksand β€” a bed of soft or loose sand saturated with water and having considerable depth, yielding under weight and therefore tending to suck down any object resting on its surface.
  • mire β€” a tract or area of wet, swampy ground; bog; marsh.
  • fluid β€” a substance, as a liquid or gas, that is capable of flowing and that changes its shape at a steady rate when acted upon by a force tending to change its shape.
  • alluvium β€” a fine-grained fertile soil consisting of mud, silt, and sand deposited by flowing water on flood plains, in river beds, and in estuaries
  • scum β€” a film or layer of foul or extraneous matter that forms on the surface of a liquid.
  • fungus β€” any of a diverse group of eukaryotic single-celled or multinucleate organisms that live by decomposing and absorbing the organic material in which they grow, comprising the mushrooms, molds, mildews, smuts, rusts, and yeasts, and classified in the kingdom Fungi or, in some classification systems, in the division Fungi (Thallophyta) of the kingdom Plantae.
  • oil β€” any of a large class of substances typically unctuous, viscous, combustible, liquid at ordinary temperatures, and soluble in ether or alcohol but not in water: used for anointing, perfuming, lubricating, illuminating, heating, etc.
  • slop β€” to spill or splash (liquid).
  • goop β€” a viscous or sticky substance; goo.
  • yuck β€” a loud, hearty laugh.
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