adjective, -er, -est, noun, adverb | 1. | smooth and glossy; sleek. |
| 2. | smooth in manners, speech, etc.; suave. |
| 3. | sly; shrewdly adroit: He's a slick customer, all right. |
| 4. | ingenious; cleverly devised: a slick plan to get out of work. |
| 5. | slippery, esp. from being covered with or as if with ice, water, or oil. |
| 6. | deftly executed and having surface appeal or sophistication, but shallow or glib in content; polished but superficial; glib: a writer who has mastered every formula of slick fiction. |
| 7. | Slang. wonderful; remarkable; first-rate. |
| 8. | a smooth or slippery place or spot or the substance causing it: oil slick. |
| 9. | Informal.
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| 10. | any of various paddlelike tools for smoothing a surface. |
| 11. | Automotive. a wide tire without a tread, used in racing. |
| 12. | Military Slang. a helicopter. |
| 13. | smoothly; cleverly. |
| 1. | to make sleek or smooth. |
| 2. | to use a slicker on (skins or hides). |
| 3. | Informal. to make smart or fine; spruce up (usually fol. by up). |
| 4. | Metallurgy. a small trowel used for smoothing the surface of the mold. |
| 5. | any woodworking chisel having a blade more than 2 in. (5 cm) wide. |

slick (slĭk) adj. slick·er, slick·est
[Middle English slike, from Old English *slice; see lei- in Indo-European roots. V., Middle English sliken, from Late Old English -slīcian, -slȳcian (in nīgslȳcod, freshly smoothed).] slick'ly adv., slick'ness n. |
slick
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slick
glassy patch or streak on a relatively undisturbed ocean or lake surface, formed where surface tension is reduced by a monomolecular layer of organic matter produced by plankton or by man; closer to shore most of the material is man-made hydrocarbon pollutant. Slicks are patchy when the wind velocity is less than about 13 kilometres per hour (7 knots). Winds with higher velocities break slicks into narrow, closely spaced windrows aligned parallel to the wind direction. Elongate parallel slicks may also form over and migrate with the trailing slopes of internal waves
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