释义 |
▪ I. slip-slap, n.|ˈslɪpslæp| [f. slap v.1, with usual variation of vowel.] †1. ? A slipper. Obs.—1
1669Penn No Cross xvii. §5 (1682) 336 Shoes and Slip-slaps lac'd with Silk or Silver-Lace. 2. The repeated flapping sound caused by loosely-worn shoes.
1890D. Gerard Lady Baby vi, The well-known slip-slap of the lodging-house servant's down-trodden shoes. ▪ II. slip-slap, v. [See prec.] 1. intr. To slap repeatedly in rapid succession. rare—1.
1721S. Centlivre Artifice 111, I ha' found her Fingers slip-slap, this a-way, and that a-way, like a Flail upon a Wheat-sheaf. 2. = slip-slop v. 3. rare.
1926T. E. Lawrence Seven Pillars v. lvii. 302 At Cairo my sandalled feet slip-slapped up the quiet Savoy corridors. 1965‘Lauchmonen’ Old Thom's Harvest v. 58 She slip-slapped in her cut-back slippers to the door. |