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Толковый словарь английского языка Oxford English Reference - slug

 

Slug

slug
1. n. 1 a small shell-less mollusc of the class Gastropoda often destructive to plants. 2 a a bullet esp. of irregular shape. b a missile for an airgun. 3 Printing a a metal bar used in spacing. b a line of type in Linotype printing. 4 esp. US a tot of liquor. 5 a unit of mass, given an acceleration of 1 foot per second per second by a force of 1 lb. 6 a roundish lump of metal. Etymology: ME slugg(e) sluggard, prob. f. Scand. 2. v. & n. US --v.tr. (slugged, slugging) strike with a hard blow. --n. a hard blow. Phrases and idioms slug it out 1 fight it out. 2 endure; stick it out. Derivatives slugger n. Etymology: 19th c.: orig. unkn.
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1.
  I. noun Etymology: Middle English ~ge, of Scandinavian origin; akin to Norwegian dialect ~ga to walk ~gishly Date: 15th century ~gard, a lump, disk, or cylinder of material (as plastic or metal): as, a. a musket ball, bullet, a piece of metal roughly shaped for subsequent processing, a $50 gold piece, a disk for insertion in a slot machine, any of numerous chiefly terrestrial pulmonate gastropods (order Stylommatophora) that are found in most parts of the world where there is a reasonable supply of moisture and are closely related to the land snails but are long and wormlike and have only a rudimentary shell often buried in the mantle or entirely absent, a smooth soft larva of a sawfly or moth that creeps like a mollusk, 5. a quantity of liquor drunk in one swallow, a detached mass of fluid (as water vapor or oil) that causes impact (as in a circulating system), 6. a strip of metal thicker than a printer's lead, a line of type cast as one piece, a usually temporary type line serving to instruct or identify, the gravitational unit of mass in the foot-pound-second system to which a pound force can impart an acceleration of one foot per second per second and which is equal to the mass of an object weighing 32 pounds, II. transitive verb (~ged; ~ging) Date: 1912 to add a printer's ~ to, to drink in gulps, III. noun Etymology: perhaps from ~ to load with ~s Date: 1830 a heavy blow especially with the fist, IV. transitive verb (~ged; ~ging) Date: circa 1861 to strike heavily with or as if with the fist or a bat, fight 4b ...
Толковый словарь английского языка

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