| 1. | to cut with a violent sweeping stroke or by striking violently and at random, as with a knife or sword. |
| 2. | to lash; whip. |
| 3. | to cut, reduce, or alter: The editors slashed the story to half its length. |
| 4. | to make slits in (a garment) to show an underlying fabric. |
| 5. | to criticize, censure, or attack in a savage or cutting manner. |
| 6. | to lay about one with sharp, sweeping strokes; make one's way by cutting. |
| 7. | to make a sweeping, cutting stroke. |
| 8. | a sweeping stroke, as with a knife, sword, or pen. |
| 9. | a cut, wound, or mark made with such a stroke. |
| 10. | a curtailment, reduction, or alteration: a drastic slash of prices. |
| 11. | a decorative slit in a garment showing an underlying fabric. |
| 12. | virgule. |
| 13. | (in forest land)
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| 1. | a short oblique stroke (/) between two words indicating that whichever is appropriate may be chosen to complete the sense of the text in which they occur: The defendant and/or his/her attorney must appear in court. |
| 2. | a dividing line, as in dates, fractions, a run-in passage of poetry to show verse division, etc.: 3/21/27; 3/4; Sweetest love I do not go/For weariness of thee. |
slash
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slash
oblique stroke