Slug

  • 11Slug — Slug. См. Вырубка. (Источник: «Металлы и сплавы. Справочник.» Под редакцией Ю.П. Солнцева; НПО Профессионал , НПО Мир и семья ; Санкт Петербург, 2003 г.) …

    Словарь металлургических терминов

  • 12slug — index beat (strike) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …

    Law dictionary

  • 13slug — (slug) any of numerous terrestrial gastropods closely related to the snails but having a rudimentary or absent shell; they are divided between the subclasses Euthyneura and Streptoneura. Some are intermediate hosts of parasitic trematodes …

    Medical dictionary

  • 14slug — vb *strike, hit, smite, punch, slog, swat, clout, slap, cuff, box …

    New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • 15slug — (informal) First Class Mail or Standard Mail (A) that is too thick to be distributed into a case. Such a mailpiece must be manually culled in the facing and canceling operation. (Also see bulkie) …

    Glossary of postal terms

  • 16slug- Ⅰ — *slug germ.?, Verb: nhd. träge sein ( Verb); ne. be lazy; Rekontruktionsbasis: mnd.; Etymologie: s. ing. *sleu ?, *leu ?, Adjektiv, schlaff, Pokorny 962; …

    Germanisches Wörterbuch

  • 17slug- Ⅱ — *slug , *sluh germ.?, Substantiv: nhd. Schlauch; ne. tube; Etymologie: s. ing. *sleug̑ ?, *leug̑ ?, *sleuk̑ ?, *leuk̑ ?, Verb, gleiten, schlüpfen, Pokorny 964; Literatur: Falk/Torp 5 …

    Germanisches Wörterbuch

  • 18slug — [v] hit bang, bash, bat, batter, beat, belt, box*, bump, clobber, clock*, clout, club, crack, flail, flog, hammer*, jab, knock, KO*, lambaste, let have it*, nail*, pelt, pop, pound, punch, slam, slap, smack, sock, swat, thrash, thwack, wallop,… …

    New thesaurus

  • 19Slug — For other uses, see Slug (disambiguation). For marine slugs, see Sea slug. For snails, see Snail. Slug Various species of British …

    Wikipedia

  • 20slug — English has at least two, possibly four distinct words slug. The oldest, ‘shell less mollusc’ [15], originally meant ‘slow or lazy person’. It was not applied to the slow moving animal until the 18th century. It was probably a borrowing from a… …

    The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins