释义 |
WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2024slab•ber•y (slab′ə rē),USA pronunciation adj. - slobbery.
WordReference Random House Learner's Dictionary of American English © 2024slob•ber /ˈslɑbɚ/USA pronunciation v. - Physiology to let saliva or liquid run from the mouth:[no object]The dog was slobbering all over the baby.
- to wet or make foul with saliva:[~ + object]The dog is slobbering the baby.
- to express one's feelings too sentimentally:[no object]slobbering about how much he loved her.
n. [uncountable] - Physiologysaliva or liquid dribbling from the mouth;
slaver. - overly sentimental speech or actions.
WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2024slob•ber (slob′ər),USA pronunciation v.i. - Physiologyto let saliva or liquid run from the mouth;
slaver; drivel. - to indulge in mawkish sentimentality:My family slobbered all over me when I finally got home.
v.t. - to wet or make foul by slobbering:The baby has slobbered his bib.
- Physiologyto let (saliva or liquid) run from the mouth:The baby slobbered milk on his bib.
- to utter with slobbering:He sobbed and slobbered the bad news.
n. - Physiologysaliva or liquid dribbling from the mouth;
slaver. - mawkishly sentimental speech or actions.
Also, slabber. - Middle English (noun, nominal and verb, verbal), variant of slabber. See slab2, -er6 1350–1400
slob′ber•er, n. - 1.See corresponding entry in Unabridged drool, dribble, slop.
Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers:: slobber /ˈslɒbə/, slabber vb - to dribble (saliva, food, etc) from the mouth
- (intransitive) to speak or write mawkishly
- (transitive) to smear with matter dribbling from the mouth
n - liquid or saliva spilt from the mouth
- maudlin language or behaviour
Etymology: 15th Century: from Middle Low German, Middle Dutch slubberen; see slaver²ˈslobberer, ˈslabberer n ˈslobbery, ˈslabbery adj |