n. A puddle; a miry or slippery place.n. Liquid carelessly dropped or spilled about; a wet place.n. plural Liquid food or nourishment; thin food, as gruel or thin broth prepared for the sick: so called in contempt.n. plural The waste, dirty water, dregs, etc., of a house.n. In ceramics, same as slip, 11.To spill, as a liquid; usually, to spill by causing to overflow the edge of a containing vessel: as, to slop water on the floor in carrying a full pail.To drinkgreedily and grossly; swill.To spill liquid upon; soil by letting a liquid fall upon: as, the table was s lopped with drink.To be spilled or overflow, as a liquid, by the motion of the vessel containing it: usually with over.To work or walk in the wet; make a slop.n. Originally, an outer garment, as a jacket or cassock; in later provincial use, “an outer garment made of linen; a smock-frock; a nightgown” (Wright).n. A garment covering the legs and the body below the waist, worn by men, and varying in cut according to the fashion: in this sense also in the plural.n. Clothing; ready-made clothing; in the British navy, the clothes and bedding of the men, which are supplied by the government at about cost price: usually in the plural.n. An article of clothing made of leather, apparently shoes or slippers. They are mentioned as of black, tawny, and red leather, and as being of small cost.n. A tailor.n. The product from finely ground Indian corn freed from the germs and bolted, the bran which remains on the bolting-cloth sieves being pressed, mixed with about 50 per cent. of water, and sold for immediate use as cattle-food. Also called glucose food, sugar-food, corn-food, etc.