释义 |
slush I. \ˈsləsh\ noun (-es) Etymology: perhaps of Scandinavian origin; akin to Norwegian slusk slop, slush, Swedish slask wet, slushy weather 1. a. : partly melted snow : watery snow b. : a substance resembling melted snow (as a mixture of solid carbon dioxide and acetone) c. : incoherent ice crystals formed during the early stages of freezing of salt water (as in the Arctic ocean) 2. a. : soft mud : mire < the water was dirty with the slush brought to the surface by the trampling — F.D.Davison > b. : liquid mud used in well drilling c. : grout made of portland cement, sand, and water 3. : refuse grease and fat from cooking especially on shipboard 4. a. : a soft mixture of grease or oil and other materials for protecting the surface of metal parts against corrosion; especially : a mixture of white lead and lime for painting the bright parts of machines (as the connecting rods of steamboats) to preserve them from oxidation b. : liquid enamel applied as a ground coat on metalware 5. : slush pulp 6. : trashy and usually cheaply sentimental material (as in a book, newspaper, or film) : rubbish, drivel, mush < syndicated slush > < the dramatic slush known as soap operas — G.S.Perry > 7. dialect England : a sloppy person : sloven II. verb (-ed/-ing/-es) transitive verb 1. : to wet, splash, or soil with slush < we were quite slushed in the mire — R.T.Wilson > 2. a. : to cover with a protective coating of paint or lubricating slush < masts slushed with linseed — W.P.Moore > < bearings … slushed with two coatings of pure petrolatum — Packing & Shipping > b. : to apply a finishing material to roughly (as by dipping, spraying, or brushing) 3. : to wash (as a deck) roughly or noisily : sluice < waiting … for the bo'sun to come aloft to slush the deck — Herman Smith > 4. : to fill in (as the joints of a wall or of a block pavement) with slush or grout — often used with in or up < slush in well all the joints between the tile and brickwork — J.E.Ray > 5. a. : to fill (old mine workings) hydraulically with fine waste material b. : to transport (as ore or rock) in a scraper that is usually drawn by a hoist and cable 6. a. : to pump (wet pulp) in paper manufacturing b. : to extract surplus liquid from (pulp) intransitive verb 1. : to make one's way through slush : slosh, wade < slushed through the mire doggedly — Century Magazine > < slushed through waist-deep water — L.M.Uris > 2. : to make a splashing sound < shoes slushing in the mud — Shirley A. Grau > < the filthy gutter slushes — R.L.Stevenson > III. noun (-es) : a sound of or as if of slushing through soft mud or snow IV. noun 1. : a partially frozen soft drink 2. : unsolicited material submitted to a publisher |