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SLIDDER Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster
1. chiefly dialectal : slide, slip . 2. chiefly dialectal : slither.
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www.merriam-webster.com
slidder, adj. & adv. meanings, etymology and more | Oxford English ...
There are six meanings listed in OED's entry for the word slidder. See 'Meaning & use' for definitions, usage, and quotation evidence. This word is now ...
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www.oed.com
SLIDDER definition in American English - Collins Dictionary
Definition of 'sliddery' · 1. causing or tending to cause objects to slip. a slippery road · 2. liable to slip from the grasp, a position, etc · 3. not to be ...
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www.collinsdictionary.com
slidder
▪ I. ˈslidder, n. dial. [Cf. slidder a. and v.] A trench or hollow running down a hill; a steep slope. For other uses see the Eng. Dial. Dict.a 1793 G. White Selborne, Obs. on Veget. (1853) 301 One of the slidders, or trenches, down the middle of the Hanger..is still called strawberry-slidder. 1842 ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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slidder - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Middle English. edit. Adjective. edit. slidder. alternative form of slider. Scots. edit. Verb. edit. slidder. To slither. Swedish.
en.wiktionary.org
en.wiktionary.org
Slidder - Websters Dictionary 1828
SLID'DER, verb intransitive [See Slide.] To slide with interruption. [Not in use.] Websters Dictionary 1828
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webstersdictionary1828.com
Martius yellow
have been used to stain erythrocytes yellow so that they contrast well with red fibrin in trichrome staining methods such as Lendrum's Picro Mallory and Slidder's
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en.wikipedia.org
Slidder Definition & Meaning | YourDictionary
verb (dialectal or archaic) To slip or slide, especially clumsily, or in a gingerly, timorous way. He sliddered down as best as he could.
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www.yourdictionary.com
"SLIDDER": A person or thing that slides - OneLook
▸ adjective: (obsolete) Slippery. ▸ verb: (dialectal or archaic) To slip or slide, especially clumsily, or in a gingerly, timorous way. Similar:.
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onelook.com
Slidder - Etymology, Origin & Meaning
"glide, move smoothly and easily over a surface," also "to fall, lose one's balance through slipping," from Old English slidan.
www.etymonline.com
www.etymonline.com
slidder, n. meanings, etymology and more | Oxford English Dictionary
The earliest known use of the noun slidder is in the late 1700s. OED's earliest evidence for slidder is from before 1793, in the writing of Gilbert White ...
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www.oed.com
sliddery
ˈsliddery, a. Now dial. Forms: 3 slid(d)ri, 5 slydrye, 6 slyddry, -rie, 6–7 slidrie, 8 slidd'ry, 8–9 sliddry; 3–5 slideri, 4 -ery, slydery, sledery (6 Sc. -erie), 5, 7 (9) slidderie, 9 sliddery. [f. slidder v. + -y. Cf. MDu. sliderich.] 1. Slippery; on which one may readily slip.a 1225 Ancr. R. 252 ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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slidderness
† ˈslidderness Obs. [f. slidder a.] Slipperiness, smoothness. Also fig.971 Blickl. Gl. (Ps. xxxiv. 6), Slidornis, lubricum. c 1380 Wyclif Sel. Wks. II. 4 Many men felden doun for slidirnesse of þis weie. 1398 Trevisa Barth. De P.R. v. xxxviii. (Bodl. MS.), Ȝif he were slider and smoþe within, by sli...
Oxford English Dictionary
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slither
▪ I. slither, n. (ˈslɪðə(r)) Also Sc. sclither. [f. slither a. or v.] 1. pl. ‘Loose stones lying in great quantities on the side of a rock or hill’ (Jamieson). Sc.1805 J. Nicol Poems II. 103 (Jam.), Fir'd wi' hope, he onward dashes, Thro' heather, sclithers, bogs, an' rashes. 1884 T. Speedy Sport Hi...
Oxford English Dictionary
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slitter
▪ I. slitter, n. (ˈslɪtə(r)) [f. slit v. + -er1.] One who, or that which, slits; spec. as the name of various implements.1611 Cotgr., Tailleur, a cutter, slitter, hewer. 1862 Mrs. H. Wood Mrs. Hallib. xxv, The slitters slit the four fingers, and shaped the thumbs and forgits. 1865 Bauerman Catal. Mi...
Oxford English Dictionary
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