: a piece of metal roughly shaped for subsequent processing
c
: a $50 gold piece
d
: a disk for insertion in a slot machine
especially: one used illegally instead of a coin
3
: 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
4
: a smooth soft larva of a sawfly or moth that creeps like a mollusk
5
a
: a quantity of liquor drunk in one swallow
b
: a detached mass of fluid (such as water vapor or oil) that causes impact (as in a circulating system)
6
a
: a strip of metal thicker than a printer's lead
b
: a line of type cast as one piece
c
: a usually temporary type line serving to instruct or identify
7
: 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
Noun (1)
he's always a slug in the morning, which is why he prefers to sleep late
knocked back another slug of whiskey Noun (2)
one well aimed slug on the head knocked him out Verb (2)
she got so angry that she slugged the back of the chair and knocked it over
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Noun
When Dina refuses an anesthetic slug of alcohol during the proceedings, Jesse gets the wind up.—Mary McNamara, Los Angeles Times, 26 May 2025 Rather than look to slug, Mookie Betts lifted a fly ball deep enough to advance Edman to third.—Fabian Ardaya, New York Times, 21 May 2025
Verb
The Horned Frogs slugged 16 hits off five KU pitchers.—Gary Bedore, Kansas City Star, 24 May 2025 Righties and lefties are hitting under .200 against Hamilton, but lefties are slugging .522 off of him.—Gary Phillips, New York Daily News, 23 May 2025 See All Example Sentences for slug
Word History
Etymology
Noun (1)
Middle English slugge, of Scandinavian origin; akin to Norwegian dialect slugga to walk sluggishly
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