释义 |
[ sluhb-er ] / ˈslʌb ər /
verb (used with object)to perform hastily or carelessly. Origin of slubberFirst recorded in 1520–30, slubber is from the Low German word slubbern to do work carelessly OTHER WORDS FROM slubberslub·ber·ing·ly, adverbWords nearby slubbersloyd, S.L.P., SLR, SLSC, slub, slubber, slubberdegullion, sludge, sludgeworm, sludging, sludgy Dictionary.com UnabridgedBased on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2020 Example sentences from the Web for slubberI should have slubber'd thee, and stain'd thy beauty; Your hand, your hand Sir!King. The Mad Lover|Francis Beaumont The slubber never spoke, but glanced at his wife, who stood glaring at him. The Bishop of Cottontown|John Trotwood Moore As in the slubber, intermediate, and roving frames, the rove is taken from two bobbins for one spindle. Textiles|William H. Dooley In being applied to the slubber a breakage either at the front or back can be arranged for. Scientific American Supplement No. 299|Various
There is nothing to help out, or slubber over, the defects of the voice in the one case, nor of the style in the other. Hazlitt on English Literature|Jacob Zeitlin
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