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All slop synonyms

slop
S s

noun slop

  • food β€” any nourishing substance that is eaten, drunk, or otherwise taken into the body to sustain life, provide energy, promote growth, etc.
  • aqua β€” Aqua is the same as the colour aquamarine.
  • eatables β€” edible.
  • glop β€” unappetizing food, especially of a semiliquid consistency.
  • mush β€” a trip or journey, especially across snow and ice with a dog team.
  • aquae β€” Chiefly Pharmacology. water. a liquid. a solution, especially in water.
  • corn β€” Corn is used to refer to crops such as wheat and barley. It can also be used to refer to the seeds from these plants.
  • dreck β€” excrement; dung.
  • glops β€” unappetizing food, especially of a semiliquid consistency.
  • draff β€” dregs, as in a brewing process; lees; refuse.
  • goo β€” a thick or sticky substance: Wash that goo off your hands.
  • goop β€” a viscous or sticky substance; goo.
  • foul matter β€” Printing. materials, as manuscript, galleys, or proofs, that have been superseded by revised proofs or galleys or by the bound book, and have been returned to the publisher by the printer.
  • garbage β€” discarded animal and vegetable matter, as from a kitchen; refuse.
  • waste β€” to consume, spend, or employ uselessly or without adequate return; use to no avail or profit; squander: to waste money; to waste words.
  • gunk β€” any sticky or greasy residue or accumulation: gunk on the oil filter.
  • feculence β€” full of dregs or fecal matter; foul, turbid, or muddy.
  • edibles β€” fit to be eaten as food; eatable; esculent.
  • filth β€” offensive or disgusting dirt or refuse; foul matter: the filth dumped into our rivers.
  • liquid β€” composed of molecules that move freely among themselves but do not tend to separate like those of gases; neither gaseous nor solid.
  • offscouring β€” Often, offscourings. something scoured off; filth; refuse.
  • ordure β€” dung; manure; excrement.

verb slop

  • ladling β€” a long-handled utensil with a cup-shaped bowl for dipping or conveying liquids.
  • begrime β€” to make dirty; soil
  • boozing β€” any alcoholic beverage; whiskey.
  • douse β€” to plunge into water or the like; drench: She doused the clothes in soapy water.
  • chocking β€” a wedge or block of wood, metal, or the like, for filling in a space, holding an object steady, etc.
  • ingurgitate β€” to swallow greedily or in great quantity, as food.
  • bespatter β€” to splash all over, as with dirty water
  • fall over β€” person: trip or slip
  • blotched β€” Something that is blotched has blotches on it.
  • wedged β€” having the shape of a wedge.
  • overbrim β€” To flow over the brim; to overflow.
  • bolt β€” A bolt is a long metal object which screws into a nut and is used to fasten things together.
  • irrupt β€” to break or burst in suddenly.
  • overcrowd β€” Fill (accommodations or a space) beyond what is usual or comfortable.
  • bestrew β€” to scatter or lie scattered over (a surface)
  • daub β€” When you daub a substance such as mud or paint on something, you spread it on that thing in a rough or careless way.
  • dip β€” to plunge (something, as a cloth or sponge) temporarily into a liquid, so as to moisten it, dye it, or cause it to take up some of the liquid: He dipped the brush into the paint bucket.
  • wolf β€” any of several large carnivorous mammals of the genus Canis, of the dog family Canidae, especially C. lupus, usually hunting in packs, formerly common throughout the Northern Hemisphere but now chiefly restricted to the more unpopulated parts of its range.
  • downing β€” a downward movement; descent.
  • overcrowding β€” Fill (accommodations or a space) beyond what is usual or comfortable.
  • immerge β€” to plunge, as into a fluid.
  • gulp β€” to gasp or choke, as when taking large drafts of a liquid.
  • welling β€” a hole drilled or bored into the earth to obtain water, petroleum, natural gas, brine, or sulfur.
  • chock β€” a block or wedge of wood used to prevent the sliding or rolling of a heavy object
  • immerse β€” to plunge into or place under a liquid; dip; sink.
  • lade β€” to put (something) on or in, as a burden, load, or cargo; load.
  • downed β€” from higher to lower; in descending direction or order; toward, into, or in a lower position: to come down the ladder.
  • bailed β€” Also, bailer. a bucket, dipper, or other container used for bailing.
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