| external force acting on an object or surface parallel to the slope or plane |
| coefficient of substance's elasticity expressing ratio between pressure and fractional change |
slip1 (slɪp) ![]() | |
| —vb (when intr, | |
| 1. | to move or cause to move smoothly and easily |
| 2. | (tr) to place, insert, or convey quickly or stealthily |
| 3. | (tr) to put on or take off easily or quickly: to slip on a sweater |
| 4. | (intr) to lose balance and slide unexpectedly: he slipped on the ice |
| 5. | to let loose or be let loose |
| 6. | to be released from (something); escape |
| 7. | (tr) to let go (mooring or anchor lines) over the side |
| 8. | to pass out of (the mind or memory) |
| 9. | (tr) to overlook, neglect, or miss: to slip an opportunity |
| 10. | (intr) to move or pass swiftly or unperceived: to slip quietly out of the room |
| 11. | to make a mistake |
| 12. | Also: sideslip to cause (an aircraft) to slide sideways or (of an aircraft) to slide sideways |
| 13. | (intr) to decline in health, mental ability, etc |
| 14. | (intr) (of an intervertebral disc) to become displaced from the normal position |
| 15. | (tr) to dislocate (a bone) |
| 16. | (of animals) to give birth to (offspring) prematurely |
| 17. | (tr) to pass (a stitch) from one needle to another without knitting it |
| 18. | a. (tr) to operate (the clutch of a motor vehicle) so that it partially disengages |
| b. (intr) (of the clutch of a motor vehicle) to fail to engage, esp as a result of wear | |
| 19. | let slip |
| a. to allow to escape | |
| b. to say unintentionally | |
| 20. | slang slip one over on to hoodwink or trick |
| —n | |
| 21. | the act or an instance of slipping |
| 22. | a mistake or oversight: a slip of the pen |
| 23. | a moral lapse or failing |
| 24. | a woman's sleeveless undergarment, worn as a lining for and to give support to a dress |
| 25. | (US), (Canadian) a narrow space between two piers in which vessels may dock |
| 26. | See slipway |
| 27. | a kind of dog lead that allows for the quick release of the dog |
| 28. | a small block of hard steel of known thickness used for measurement, usually forming one of a set |
| 29. | the ratio between output speed and input speed of a transmission device when subtracted from unity, esp of a drive belt or clutch that is not transmitting full power |
| 30. | cricket |
| a. the position of the fielder who stands a little way behind and to the offside of the wicketkeeper | |
| b. the fielder himself | |
| 31. | the relative movement of rocks along a fault plane |
| 32. | a landslide, esp one blocking a road or railway line |
| 33. | metallurgy, crystallog the deformation of a metallic crystal caused when one part glides over another part along a plane |
| 34. | the deviation of a propeller from its helical path through a fluid, expressed as the difference between its actual forward motion and its theoretical forward motion in one revolution |
| 35. | another name for sideslip |
| 36. | give someone the slip to elude or escape from someone |
| [C13: from Middle Low German or Dutch slippen] | |
| 'slipless1 | |
| —adj | |
slip2 (slɪp) ![]() | |
| —n | |
| 1. | a narrow piece; strip |
| 2. | a small piece of paper: a receipt slip |
| 3. | a part of a plant that, when detached from the parent, will grow into a new plant; cutting; scion |
| 4. | a young slender person: a slip of a child |
| 5. | dialect a young pig |
| 6. | printing |
| a. a long galley | |
| b. a less common name for a galley proof | |
| 7. | chiefly (US) a pew or similar long narrow seat |
| 8. | a small piece of abrasive material of tapering section used in honing |
| —vb , slips, slipping, slipped | |
| 9. | (tr) to detach (portions of stem, etc) from (a plant) for propagation |
| [C15: probably from Middle Low German, Middle Dutch slippe to cut, strip] | |
slip (up) definition
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| SLIP Serial Line Internet Protocol |
slip
In addition to the idioms beginning with slip, also see give the slip; let slip.
slip
in engineering and physics, sliding displacement along a plane of one part of a crystal relative to the rest of the crystal under the action of shearing forces-that is, forces acting parallel to that plane. Much of the permanent, or plastic, deformation of materials under stress is the result of slip within the individual crystals that constitute the material. Slip and an alternate mode of deformation, twinning, are the only ways that crystals in solids can be permanently deformed. In slip, all the atoms on one side of the slip (or glide) plane do not slide simultaneously from one set of positions to the next. The atoms move sequentially one row at a time into the next position along the plane because of structural defects or spaces, called edge dislocations, in the crystal that move at the same rate in the opposite direction.
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